Skip to main content
  • Information for
    • Students
    • Alumni & Friends
    • Faculty
    • Staff
    • Community
  • QUICK LINKS
  • DIRECTORY
  • APPLY
  • GIVE
  • RENT
Hunter College
About
  • Overview
  • Mission
  • Strategic Plan
  • Accreditation
  • Fast Facts
  • Office of the President
  • Capital Projects & Planning
  • Sustainability
  • Campus Information
  • Contact Us
Academics
  • Approach
  • Provost
  • Schools
  • Departments & Programs
  • Majors
  • Honors & Scholars
  • Education Abroad
  • Advising
  • Research & Creative Works
  • Course Catalogs
Admissions
  • Overview
  • Undergraduate
  • Graduate
  • Course Catalogs
Student Life
  • Clubs & Organizations
  • Residence Life
  • Athletics
  • Dining On Campus
  • Community
  • Events
  • News
  • Libraries
Hunter College Schools
  • School of Arts & Sciences
  • School of Education
  • School of Health Professions
  • Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing
  • Silberman School of Social Work
More Schools
  • Hunter College Campus Schools
  • Hunter College Continuing Education
  • Libraries
  • Students
  • Alumni & Friends
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Community
  • Events
  • News
  • APPLY
  • GIVE
  • RENT
  • QUICK LINKS
  • DIRECTORY
News / School of Arts & Sciences /

Civil Discourse Series Examined Hasidic Jews in America

March 5, 2025
Share
schneur newfield

Hasidic Jews form a distinctive and insular subculture in many American cities, imparting their heritage through strong families, synagogues, and educational institutions. In recent years, some members of such communities have left the fold, leading to a spate of novels, memoirs, television shows, and films about the experience of breaking with tradition.

What’s fact and what’s fiction in these popular depictions, and what can it tell us about other traditional groups that experience departures? What happens when people feel profound cultural displacement, whether by choice or circumstance? How does it transform their lives and psyches? 

Hunter sociologists Schneur Zalman Newfield and Heba Gowayed discussed those subjects on March 5 in Hunter’s Promoting Civil Discourse & Intellectual Dialogue series, “Leaving the Hasidic Community: Reality versus Popular Culture.”

Newfield used examples from his colorful life as an emissary for the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement and the lives of other Hasidim who have left the fold to illustrate the complicated reality of negotiating the two worlds. Family relationships often become fraught, he recounted.

An associate professor and the interim director of Hunter’s Jewish Studies Center, Newfield focuses on cultural sociology and the study of identity, narrative, and resocialization. His book, Degrees of Separation: Identity Formation While Leaving Ultra-Orthodox Judaism (Temple University Press, 2020), explores the lives of individuals who were raised in ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities and left them, as he did. 

He received a bachelor’s from Brooklyn College and his doctorate from New York University. Before coming to CUNY, he taught sociology to incarcerated students in six New Jersey state prisons through Rutgers University-Newark’s New Jersey Scholarship and Transformative Education in Prisons program.

Gowayed, an associate professor, researches the lives of people who migrate across borders and the unequal and often violent treatment they face. Her award-winning book, Refuge (Princeton University Press) centers on displaced Syrians who sought refuge in the United States, Canada, and Germany. She is working on a book titled, The Cost of Borders, about how border crossings often provide the venues for violent and even deadly transactions marked by racism, sexism, and other discrimination. 

Watch the video below

The discussion aligned with a campaign to foster civil discourse and tolerance across CUNY’s 25 campuses, which was announced by CUNY Chancellor Félix V. Matos Rodríguez this past August during a visit to Hunter College.

Talks have focused on the Mideast conflict, Palestinian American identity, transgender rights in schools and sports, community healing by incorporating diversity and inclusion, and interfaith cooperation and pluralism.

PreviousNext

Office of Communications
for media information and more
student watching online event
Hunter on Demand

Enjoy virtual lectures, discussions and readings by members of Hunter’s distinguished faculty.

Join Us

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Flickr

NEWS SPOTLIGHT

May 9, 2025
Jody Gottfried Arnhold: Mother of Dance at Hunter

Often called the “doyenne of dance,” Jody Arnhold is an international luminary of dance advocacy and education.

May 5, 2025
Hunter School of Education Hosts Playgroup for Local Families

Hunter College’s School of Education has launched a playgroup for infants and toddlers and their families that helps special-needs children.

See All Spotlight News

EVENTS CALENDAR

May 9, 2025
Hunter MFA Playwrights Festival

The Hunter MFA Playwrights Festival features staged readings of new full-length works by Hunter’s 2025 graduating class: Mo Alani, Brandon Bogle, ...

May 14, 2025
Afterlives of San Juan Hill: Lincoln Square/ San Juan Hill Exhibition

In 1958, an emerging Puerto Rican community was displaced from the Lincoln Square and San Juan Hill neighborhoods to make way for the ...

See All Featured Events

HUNTER

Hunter College
695 Park Ave NY, NY 10065
(212) 772-4000

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Flickr
  • ABOUT
  • ACADEMICS
  • ADMISSIONS
  • EVENTS
  • NEWS
Hunter College Schools
  • School of Arts & Sciences
  • School of Education
  • School of Health Professions
  • Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing
  • Silberman School of Social Work
  • School of Arts & Sciences
  • School of Education
  • School of Health Professions
  • Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing
  • Silberman School of Social Work
Our Other Schools
  • Hunter College Campus Schools
  • Hunter College Continuing Education
  • Hunter College Campus Schools
  • Hunter College Continuing Education
Hunter College Libraries
More Info
  • Bookstore
  • Contact Us & Feedback
  • Jobs
  • Public Safety
  • Roosevelt House
  • Student Housing
  • Space Rentals
  • Bookstore
  • Contact Us & Feedback
  • Jobs
  • Public Safety
  • Roosevelt House
  • Student Housing
  • Space Rentals
Public Information
  • Annual Security & Fire Safety Report
  • Consumer Information
  • CUNY Tobacco Policy
  • Enough is Enough
  • Focus on Campus
  • Annual Security & Fire Safety Report
  • Consumer Information
  • CUNY Tobacco Policy
  • Enough is Enough
  • Focus on Campus
CUNY
  • © 2025 Hunter College
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Terms