B'nai B'rith Magazine
(formerly The B'nai B'rith IJM)
B'nai B'rith International
2020 K St. NW
Washington DC 20006
E-Mail: ijm@bnaibrith.org
Writer’s Guidelines are NOT online.
Full writer’s guidelines for a #10 SASE to above address or by email.
B'nai
B'rith Magazine specializes in social, political, historical,
religious, cultural, ‘lifestyle,’ and service articles relating chiefly
to the Jewish communities of North America and Israel.
Jewish Action
Writers Guidelines
Published
quarterly, Jewish Action presents a vibrant and dynamic approach to
Jewish living in America, Israel and around the world. The editors seek
topics of interest to an international Orthodox Jewish audience, such
as: current ongoing issues of Jewish life and experience,
human-interest features, poetry, art, music and book reviews,
historical pieces and humor.
Moment
Writers Guidelines
When
Elie Weisel and Leonard Fein founded Moment in 1975, they called it
"The New Magazine for America's Jew." In its premier issue Fein proudly
declared that Moment would include diverse opinions "of no single
ideological position, save of course, for a commitment to Jewish life."
Today, as the largest independent Jewish magazine in North America,
Moment is as committed as ever to being an independent forum, in which
disparate opinions and ideas are addressed in provocative ways.
Sh'ma
Since
1970, Sh'ma has served as a gathering place for independent voices
eager to be heard across the Jewish religious, social and political
landscape. Through its diversity, intensity, frequency and constancy,
Sh’ma has served as a public diary of the American Jewish experience.
In its pages, topics that cut to the very core of our Jewish sense of
self is discussed. Its tactic is dialogue -- rich conversation of
differing positions presented in an honest, respectful, purposeful
way, seeking to bring its readers to the table and to keep expanding
it, adding leaf after leaf, until all have a place in this sacred
conversation. The magazine covers topics as diverse as the politics of
gender; trends in new Jewish social and political involvement;
questions of culture and personal identity; ritual innovations; and
new readings of ancient texts.
Tikkun
Writers Guidelines
Tikkun Magazine began publication in 1986 as the liberal alternative to the voices of Jewish conservatism and spiritual deadness in the Jewish world and as the spiritual alternative to the voices of materialism and selfishness in Western society. Tikkun provides a space for both affiliated and non-affiliated Jews who seek to renew their Judaism, and a space for Jews and non-Jews alike to shape a politics out of spiritual values.
Tikkun gets its name from the Hebrew word, "tikkun," which means "to transform, heal and repair." This concept was developed in the Zohar, a central text of the Kabbalah, to refer to the kind of healing and transformation of the world, "tikkun olam," in which each of us can participate.








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