Known as both a provocative religious leader and a respected spiritual iconoclast, Irwin Kula has inspired thousands nationwide using Jewish wisdom in ways that speak to modern life. A renowned thinker, teacher, and rabbi, he is the author of Yearnings: Embracing the Sacred Messiness of Life (Hyperion, Sept. 2006)  winner of a “Books for a Better Life” award, and selected by Spirituality & Health magazine as one the “10 Best Spiritual Books of 2006”  and was featured in a national public TV pledge special, “The Hidden Wisdom of Our Yearnings.” A leader of religious pluralism, Kula says that the “freedom and openness of America invites us to bring our traditions to the marketplace of ideas. The challenge is to translate these wisdoms into accessible American idioms that inspire and improve our personal and public lives.”

A regular on NBC-TV’s The Today Show, and co-host of the popular weekly radio show, Hirschfield and Kula, airing on KXL in Portland, OR  one of the top 25 markets nationwide, Kula offers a perspective often missing in the media. Named by both Fast Company magazine and “Religion and Ethics Newsweekly” (PBS) as one of the new leaders shaping the American spiritual landscape, he was ranked two years in a row (no.8, and no.7, respectively) in the “Top 50 Rabbis in America,” in Newsweek.

In 2004, he wrote and was featured in Time for a New God, an acclaimed documentary shown at film festivals nationwide. Filmed as a moving monologue along the beaches, wharves, and roller coasters of Coney Island, he offers religion as a “giant tool box” for personal and social transformation. In 2003, he hosted a first-ever 13-part public TV series produced by JTN Productions, “Simple Wisdom with Irwin Kula,” using Jewish wisdom to explore such life issues as relationships, money, work, and sex.

Kula is the President of CLALThe National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, a leadership training institute, think tank and resource center. A popular media spokesperson, he has appeared on “The O’Reilly Factor” (Fox News), was a repeat guest on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” and was featured on “Frontline” (PBS) on the anniversary of 9/11, among many others. A panelist for the Washington Post/Newsweek ─ On Faith online column, he was a regular on the Hallmark Channel’s New Morning show.

A nationally recognized educator and lecturer, Kula serves as a consultant to both corporate and family foundations, as well as to religious and philanthropic institutions and non-profit agencies on leadership development and institutional change. A sought-after speaker, he has worked with such luminaries as the Dalai Lama and Queen Noor on compassionate leadership, and has traveled and taught Jewish wisdom in places as diverse as France, Italy, Bhutan, and Rwanda. He is in great demand by leaders from such diverse fields as business, technology, relationships, and religion.

Kula is the co-editor of The Book of Jewish Sacred Practices: CLAL’s Guide to Everyday & Holiday Rituals and Blessings (Jewish Lights, 2001), and co-founder of the Aitz Hayim Center for Jewish Living in Chicago. He received his B.A. in Philosophy from Columbia University, his B.H.L. from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America (JTSA) in NY, and his M.A. in Rabbinics and Rabbinic Ordination from JTSA. He has served as rabbi of congregations in St. Louis, MO; Queens, NY; and Jerusalem, Israel.
Email: ikula@clal.org

Blog Entries by Rabbi Irwin Kula

A New Fetish: Apology Voyeurism

Posted September 18, 2009 | 01:13 PM (EST)


The slew of public apologies over the past week or so from Joe Wilson, Serena Williams, and Kanye West along with the apologies during the past year from Eliot Spitzer and Mark Sanford - each offered with different degrees of sincerity and histrionics - have turned us into apology voyeurs....

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Sacred Memories: A 9/11 Ritual

Posted September 11, 2009 | 12:06 PM (EST)


I live in New York City. Two friends, including someone at whose wedding I had recently been the rabbi died in the World Trade Center. The acrid smell came through my apartment windows for days and sacred ashes, which I wiped away with tears, fell on my window sills for...

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Inglorious Basterds, Vengeance and Redemption

28 Comments | Posted August 26, 2009 | 12:34 PM (EST)


Inglorious Basterds is a powerful, entertaining cinematic experience, but this is not what you want to hear from me, an eighth-generation rabbi whose father escaped the Nazis and immigrated to America from Poland in 1938 with his parents and brother, leaving most of his family behind to be murdered by...

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Analyzing The Clintons: What Bill And Hillary Teach Us About Relationships

56 Comments | Posted August 12, 2009 | 05:24 PM (EST)


Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's anger over a mistranslated question about her husband's view has become another one of those Clinton stories that enthralls us voyeurs -- whether as zealous demonizers or avid defenders -- of one of the paradigmatic power couples of our age. Beyond the vicarious thrills that...

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Digital Tombstone: Your Life on Twitter

4 Comments | Posted May 5, 2009 | 06:16 PM (EST)


Like many people, I have been engaged by Twitter -- it's a good way to keep in touch with busy friends and to connect with new people. The mundane updates and boredom-inspired reports on what people are having for lunch -- tuna sandwich, pickle, diet coke and apple for me...

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Holder, the New York Post and Us

Posted February 20, 2009 | 05:34 PM (EST)


Attorney General Eric Holder's comments earlier this week calling Americans "cowards" when it comes to conversations about race and the New York Post's cartoon depicting a bleeding wild looking monkey representing the stimulus package being shot dead by white policeman both evoked nasty attacks of racism. While Holder's statement and...

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The Jewish Reaction to the Pope's Welcoming Back Holocaust Denying Bishop: Disproportionate!

Posted February 2, 2009 | 11:13 AM (EST)


The official Jewish response to Pope Benedict XVI recent decision to reach out to the St. Pious X Society and to revoke the excommunication (though not yet determining the status) of four bishops says a great deal about the psycho-social state of American Jewish leadership -- or at least the...

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The Change We Seek

Posted November 6, 2008 | 11:43 AM (EST)


11:00 PM November 4, 2008 and Fox and MSNBC have both projected Barack Obama the winner of Ohio. A son of Kenya and of Europe, two great streams of humanity, united in the first African American president of the Unites States. Tears are streaming down my face.

I am...

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Why Voting And Religion Don't Mix

Posted November 1, 2008 | 07:48 AM (EST)


Religion invoked as a reason to vote for or against a political candidate - by which we generally mean invoking god and some scriptural passage or other sacred text as proof for our view - is a low-level use of religion that makes religion small, mere apologetics at best and...

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