Translations â Details, episodes & analysis
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Translations
Project Shema
Frequency: 1 episode/79d. Total Eps: 4

Translations is a new initiative from Project Shema exploring how we can approach complex issues with nuance and empathy. Every six months, we dive into a different topic shaping our world and our work. Through conversations with leading academics, practitioners, and community voices, this podcast invites listeners to learn alongside us as we translate big questions into deeper understanding. http://projectshema.org/translations
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Apple Podcasts
đşđ¸ USA - judaism
23/04/2026#74đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
14/04/2026#87đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
13/04/2026#69đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
12/04/2026#19đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
11/04/2026#43đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
10/04/2026#33đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
09/04/2026#17đşđ¸ USA - judaism
09/04/2026#96đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
08/04/2026#8đ¨đŚ Canada - judaism
07/04/2026#19
Spotify
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See allScore global : 58%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
Andrew Mbuvi
mardi 24 mars 2026 ⢠Duration 44:08
Kara and Eli are joined by Andrew Mbuvi, distinguished scholar of biblical studies whose work bridges theology, race, and social justice. A leading voice in antiracist pedagogy, his scholarship examines how the histories of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament intersect with the realities of race, violence, and power. This conversation is a powerful foundation for understanding why Project Shema is so interested in translation in the first placeâhow the words we use shape our understanding of both text and one another.
Chapter Breakdown:
- :54 - What does âinclusionâ mean to Andrew?
- 2:21 - How we think about the problem of division
- 4:39 - How to expand our understanding of one anotherâs humanity
- 6:17 - The idea of âsuperficial differencesâ between people
- 9:44 - How Andrewâs background informs his inclusion practice
- 16:00 - How coming to America changed his self-understanding
- 18:50 - Language and the need to translate different aspects of yourself and one another
- 31:54 - Translation and true inclusion
- 41:21 - The importance of maintaining curiosity
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, and please be sure to rate & review:Â
Visit our website: www.projectshema.org.
Translations is a new initiative from Project Shema exploring how we can approach complex issues with nuance and empathy. Through conversations with leading academics, practitioners, and community voices, this podcast invites listeners to learn alongside us as we translate big questions into deeper understanding. http://projectshema.org/translations
Kara & Eli
mardi 24 mars 2026 ⢠Duration 26:48
In this episode, Kara and Eli explore how our inability to translate our language, and ourselves, undermines meaningful dialogue. How can we challenge complex norms and ideas if we remain more committed to binary frameworks than to understanding one anotherâs lived experiences? The antidote, they argue, is storytelling. By illuminating how our experiences shape our perspectives, storytelling has the power to depolarize conversation. Itâs an approach at the heart of Project Shemaâs work.
Chapter Breakdown:
- 0:00: The role of translating
- 2:51: The idea of âbinary rageâ
- 3:58: How we change complex social norms
- 4:58: How do we start to translate from a place of stories?Â
- 8:11: How Kara translates herself in her experiences as a Black Jewish woman
- 9:51: How Eli translates himself as a white member of a Black Jewish family
- 12:00: The impact of ideological insularity
- 13:00: Project Shemaâs mission to translate and âwrestleâ
- 19:34: The notion of harmful speech
- 21:50: Going beyond translating just antisemitism
- 24:01: Previewing future episodes
Resources:
- Matt Boxer, What is Zionism? Assessing the Diversity of Discourse in a Charged Environment, Brandeis University: https://scholarworks.brandeis.edu/esploro/outputs/report/What-is-Zionism-Assessing-the-Diversity/9924331186501921?institution=01BRAND_INST.Â
- Damon Centola, Change: How to Make Big Things Happen: https://www.amazon.com/Change-How-Make-Things-Happen/dp/0316457337.Â
- Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion: https://www.amazon.com/Righteous-Mind-Divided-Politics-Religion/dp/0307455777Â
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, and please be sure to rate & review.
Visit our website: www.projectshema.org.
Translations is a new initiative from Project Shema exploring how we can approach complex issues with nuance and empathy. Through conversations with leading academics, practitioners, and community voices, this podcast invites listeners to learn alongside us as we translate big questions into deeper understanding. http://projectshema.org/translations
Introducing Translations
mercredi 27 aoÝt 2025 ⢠Duration 01:19
A lot of our conversations are closing space for empathy and care instead of opening new pathways for understanding. Much of that can be attributed to binary thinking and the refusal to engage with and translate the lived experiences of others.Â
Translations is about breaking down binaries by practicing dialogue across differences. We are here to translate words that carry weight so they donât end conversations, they open them up. Each episode will share stories, skills, and real conversations that show how people can stay in the room even when the tension is real. As we know, these differences are not going away.Â
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, and please be sure to rate & review.
Visit our website: www.projectshema.org.Â
Translations is a new initiative from Project Shema exploring how we can approach complex issues with nuance and empathy. Through conversations with leading academics, practitioners, and community voices, this podcast invites listeners to learn alongside us as we translate big questions into deeper understanding. http://projectshema.org/translations
Beyond Survival: Whitney Weathers on Thrivival and Inclusive Leadership
mardi 21 avril 2026 ⢠Duration 51:21
Todayâs guest is Whitney Weathers, who brings a rare combination of scholarship, strategy, and spirit to every space she enters. A consultant, educator, and thought leader in Black theology, urban education, and organizational culture, Whitney is the founder of Whitney Weathers Consulting, and a doctoral candidate at Nazarene Theological Seminary. Whitney brings a very unique combination of both academic research and lived experience to challenge institutions toward deeper inclusion. She defines the term âthrivival,â (moving past survival into thriving) and what that means specifically for Black women, which can then be applied for all of us to build more inclusive spaces. Listen for Whitneyâs truly unique leadership style that centers vulnerability.
Chapter Breakdown:
- 0:00 - Introducing Whitney
- 2:25 - Whitneyâs research on the experiences of Black women seminarian students
- 4:52 - Distinguishing between representation and inclusion
- 6:00 - Whitneyâs dissertation, "Resurrecting Resilienceâ
- 9:21 - Alice Walkerâs concept of âwomanismâ
- 12:46 - The assumption of common experiences
- 19:11 - Identity mapping
- 25:15 - The intricacies of inclusion work
- 34:11 - Professionalism and the concept of âhidden curriculumâ
- 38:22 - Inclusion versus assimilation
- 43:23 - Advice for creating more inclusive spaces
Resources:
- Dr. Willie Jennings, After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging.
- adrienne maree brown, Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds
Please be sure to subscribe, rate, and review.
Visit our website: www.projectshema.org.Â
Translations is a new initiative from Project Shema exploring how we can approach complex issues with nuance and empathy. Through conversations with leading academics, practitioners, and community voices, this podcast invites listeners to learn alongside us as we translate big questions into deeper understanding. http://projectshema.org/translations









