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lizshayne 's review for:
Native: Identity, Belonging, and Rediscovering God
by Kaitlin B. Curtice
informative
inspiring
reflective
slow-paced
Elul reading (which explains why I finished it in Tishrei).
Curtice's perspective is, necessarily, very different from mine and I find in particular the way that her Indigenous and Christian beliefs speak to one another to be both generative and a belief that can only grow in that fertile soil. Whatever teshuva, in whatever sense of the word, is going to look like for observant Jews, it is going to look different.
And also the call that she resounds in the world and the questions she asks cut deep in the all the right ways.
Curtice's perspective is, necessarily, very different from mine and I find in particular the way that her Indigenous and Christian beliefs speak to one another to be both generative and a belief that can only grow in that fertile soil. Whatever teshuva, in whatever sense of the word, is going to look like for observant Jews, it is going to look different.
And also the call that she resounds in the world and the questions she asks cut deep in the all the right ways.