Rabbi Jill Hammer, PhD, is an author, teacher, midrashist, mystic, poet, essayist, and priestess. She is committed to an earth-based and wildly mythic view of the world in which nature, ritual, and story connect us to the body of the cosmos and to ourselves. She has been called “a Jewish bard.”
Jill Hammer is among the most creative spiritual teachers in the Jewish world today. She brings to her work an unparalleled knowledge of Jewish legend and myth… as well as deep insight into soul, body and heart. Jill’s work may well be creating a new mode of experiential Judaism that will impact our community for decades to come.
–Jay Michaelson, author of God in Your Body: Kabbalah, Mindfulness, and Embodied Spiritual PracticeThe making of ritual is a sacred and co-creative art and Rabbi Jill Hammer has been developing her skills as an artist and collaborator of the sacred for a number of years. That she offers her gifts to the world is cause for celebration. She brings magic.
–Peter Pitzele, founder of Bibliodrama and author of Our Fathers’ WellsRabbi Jill Hammer teachings release deep and unforeseen meanings contained in the Torah and the Jewish tradition. Not only is she learned and creative but she has the ability to captivate as only master storytellers can.
–Rabbi J. Rolando Matalon of Congregation B’nai Jeshurun in New York, NYRabbi Jill Hammer is an exquisite teacher who blends her knowledge of ancient sacred texts with her innate wisdom and boundless creativity. Through her work, she is a natural healer of souls, creating tikkun: opportunities for redemption that are both personal and universal. She invites her students into a dynamic experience with whatever material she is teaching. I have been deeply enriched, inspired and renewed by her work, her teachings.
–Rabbi Kaya Stern-Kaufman, founder of Rimon Resource Center for Jewish Spirituality, Berkshires, MA
Rabbi Hammer is the Director of Spiritual Education at the Academy for Jewish Religion, a pluralistic rabbinical and cantorial seminary in Yonkers, NY. At AJR, she specializes in ancient and contemporary midrash, mysticism, ritual, and contemporary spirituality. To learn more about AJR, visit here.
Rabbi Hammer is also the Director of Learning and Ritual at Beit Kohenet, a house of Jewish mystical feminist earth-based seeking. At Beit Kohenet, Rabbi Hammer helps to create online and in-person transformative Jewish study opportunities and prayer spaces. To learn more about Beit Kohenet, visit beitkohenet.org.
Rabbi Hammer is the author of nine books: Sisters at Sinai: New Tales of Biblical Women (2001), The Jewish Book of Days: A Companion for All Seasons (2006), The Omer Calendar of Biblical Women (2012 and 2024), The Garden of Time (2014), The Hebrew Priestess: Ancient and New Visions of Jewish Women’s Spiritual Leadership (2016), The Book of Earth and Other Mysteries (2016), Return to the Place: The Magic, Meditation, and Mystery of Sefer Yetzirah (2020), Undertorah: An Earth-Based Kabbalah of Dreams (2022), and The Moonstone Covenant (2024).
Hammer’s academic articles have been published in journals such as Religion and Literature, The Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women’s Studies and Gender Studies, The Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Ashe: The Journal of Experimental Spirituality, and Stepping into Ourselves: An Anthology of Writings on Priestesses.
Hammer’s poetry and stories have been published in Zeek Magazine, The Torah: A Women’s Commentary, Natural Bridge, Lilith Magazine, Mitzvah Stories, Best Jewish Writing 2002, The Forward, and many other journals and magazines.
Rabbi Hammer leads guided meditation and ritual for retreats, synagogues, and rabbinical schools. Rabbi Hammer also facilitates life-cycle and seasonal rituals for individuals and for groups: weddings, baby namings, new moon circles, and other ceremonies. Her method combines sacred text and tradition with creative, poetic exploration and a sensitivity to the mythic dimension of human life.
Rabbi Hammer received her B.A. from Brandeis University in 1991. She holds a doctorate in social psychology from the University of Connecticut and received rabbinical ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary in 2001. She lives in Manhattan with her wife Shoshana Jedwab and their daughter. They attend Romemu, a Jewish Renewal congregation, where Hammer often serves the community as a teacher and darshan.
