About me

yakir englander sitting on the stairs

I’m Yakir Englander- a community builder, researcher, and student of contradictions.
All my life I have navigated between worlds: ultra-Orthodox and secular, Israeli and Palestinian, the Middle East and America, academia and activism, ancient wisdom and contemporary struggle. It’s not just about what I study; it’s how I live.

We all embody profound contradictions reflecting events that shaped us, personal stories and communal narratives, our fears and traumas, and our deepest desires. We can learn to live with these, not by “resolving” them, but by choosing our responses. Viktor Frankl taught, that while we cannot always choose what happens to us, we can choose how we respond. I know, in my body and soul, how hard this is. Still, it is my path.

The official line

For the past eight years, I’ve served as Senior Director of Leadership Programs at the Israeli-American Council (IAC), working with 3,000+ community leaders across North America. I teach rabbinical students and Jewish leaders at the Academy for Jewish Religion. I hold a Ph.D. in Jewish Philosophy and Gender Studies from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and have been a Fulbright-Rabin postdoctoral fellow and visiting scholar at Harvard Divinity School, Northwestern, Rutgers, and the Shalom Hartman Institute. I’ve published two books and twenty-two peer-reviewed articles on Jewish thought, gender and sexuality, and ethics.

For fourteen years, I worked with Kids4Peace, an interfaith dialogue youth movement in Jerusalem, including three years as vice president of the board.

Yakir Englander studying

My more personal version

A few more things about myself

When people ask about my religious or spiritual identity, I feel awkward. The most honest answer is that I try to live a mystical life, shaped primarily by Jewish tradition but interwoven with other narratives and cultures. My identity expresses itself most clearly in this: I love to pray and to converse with my ancient ancestors – even though I have no idea whether God exists.
I love practicing karate, watching world cinema, creating and listening to podcasts, and being close to the people I love. I’ve lived in intentional community for a decade. At forty-nine, I’ve recently moved, with my wife and some of those dear to me, to a mountainside in Vermont, close to nature. I was blessed with the courage to become a father. Life gave us a child with a brain injury – a journey of its own.

There is a crack in everything.
That's how the light gets in.
Leonard Cohen