Dayenu: A Jewish Call to Climate Action’s mission is to secure a just, livable, and sustainable world for all people for generations to come by building a Jewish movement that confronts the climate crisis with spiritual audacity and bold political action.
The 2026-2027 Climate Torah Rabbinic Fellow will work closely with Dayenu’s Director of Spiritual Activism & Education, the Spiritual Adaptation team, and Jewish climate leaders and culture-creators across the country to grow and support the Jewish climate movement, with a focus on the development, distribution, and teaching of Climate Torah.
Dayenu’s Spiritual Adaptation work builds a spiritually-rooted movement through:
Fellowship Description and Responsibilities:
The Climate Torah Rabbinic Fellow serves as a key member of the Spiritual Adaptation team and will focus on developing, teaching, and reaching broad audiences with Dayenu’s existing and emerging Climate Torah. In the past, our Climate Torah Fellows have developed climate-themed source sheets and learning opportunities for Jewish climate leaders, taught climate batei midrash sessions and creative writing workshops, shared Torah via Instagram, collaborated on Dayenu holiday resources, and helped design ritual guides for campaigns and election work.
We are excited for a Climate Torah Rabbinic Fellow to build relationships with clergy networks, Jewish climate volunteer leaders, culture-creators (musicians, artists), and to help create, develop, and leverage new Dayenu Torah and holiday resources in mainstream and activist spaces, on social media, in congregations, on the streets, and in solidarity and collaboration with frontline and multifaith communities.
In particular, a fellow will:
Qualifications:
Location: The position is fully remote with occasional opportunities for in-person teaching, meetings, and actions, particularly in New York, Massachusetts, or California. Fellows can be based anywhere in the U.S. This position reports to Dayenu’s Director of Spiritual Activism & Education, Rabbi Laura Bellows, who is based in Boston.
Position Dates and Hours: September 2, 2026 – May 28, 2027 (9 months – which is 37 weeks + two weeks off of your choice), with a commitment of 8 hours per week.
Compensation: This rabbinic fellowship stipend is $10,280 total, paid monthly.
To apply, please upload a resume and cover letter to d.aye.nu/apply by Monday, March 9, 2026. In your cover letter, please share why you are interested in working with Dayenu and the Jewish climate movement and highlight your teaching, facilitating, integrating activism and Torah, and/or any other relevant experience for this position.
Dayenu is an equal opportunity employer, and we are committed to racial equity and accessibility. Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews, Black and Indigenous people, people of color, people with disabilities, and LGBTQIA people are strongly encouraged to apply. Dayenu does not discriminate in employment opportunities or practices on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, sex, age, gender identity or expression, or other status protected by applicable law.
About Dayenu: A Jewish Call to Climate Action
Dayenu is building a movement of American Jews confronting the climate crisis with spiritual audacity and bold political action. We mobilize Jewish support for climate solutions, build our collective power, and raise up a spiritual, religious, and moral voice in the national and global movements confronting the climate crisis. We care deeply about equity and justice in our world and about the future we create for our children and future generations. We believe that together, drawing from our Jewish tradition, experience, and faith, we have the power to create real and lasting change.
We focus on three main areas of work: Bold action to advance comprehensive climate policy and ensure a just transition away from fossil fuels; spiritual adaptation that helps people confront the reality of the climate crisis and grapple with the deep spiritual and existential questions it raises; and movement-building.
Through a growing network of Dayenu Circles across the country and partnerships with Jewish communal institutions and multifaith and secular organizations, we’re gathering, training, and taking collective action to advance systemic solutions to the climate crisis, at the scale that science and justice demand.
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