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Raymond Simonson, founding CEO of JW3 in London, joins us for a powerful conversation about what happens when music, protest, and community collide.
At the heart of this episode is Fire Drill Fridays, a song born out of Limmud North America's eFestival during COVID—written collaboratively and shaped by the real stories of participants navigating isolation, uncertainty, and hope. From that starting point, the conversation opens into something much bigger: how collective creativity becomes a form of resistance.
We explore the emotional force of protest imagery—starting with Jane Fonda’s arrest to other symbolic acts—and how these moments echo ancient texts like Psalm 102, reframing activism as both deeply personal and profoundly communal. We reflect on the role of Jewish tradition, community-building, and even humor in sustaining people through crisis.
This episode is about resilience in real time: singing together in uncertainty, finding meaning in collective struggle, and refusing to accept that any challenge is “too big.”
If you care about activism, creative expression, or the future of community in a fractured world, this conversation will shift how you see your role—and remind you why hope is something we build together.
By srosenmanRaymond Simonson, founding CEO of JW3 in London, joins us for a powerful conversation about what happens when music, protest, and community collide.
At the heart of this episode is Fire Drill Fridays, a song born out of Limmud North America's eFestival during COVID—written collaboratively and shaped by the real stories of participants navigating isolation, uncertainty, and hope. From that starting point, the conversation opens into something much bigger: how collective creativity becomes a form of resistance.
We explore the emotional force of protest imagery—starting with Jane Fonda’s arrest to other symbolic acts—and how these moments echo ancient texts like Psalm 102, reframing activism as both deeply personal and profoundly communal. We reflect on the role of Jewish tradition, community-building, and even humor in sustaining people through crisis.
This episode is about resilience in real time: singing together in uncertainty, finding meaning in collective struggle, and refusing to accept that any challenge is “too big.”
If you care about activism, creative expression, or the future of community in a fractured world, this conversation will shift how you see your role—and remind you why hope is something we build together.