Susan Katz Miller's Blog
June 25, 2025
The Interfaith Heritage of Zohran Mamdani
Last night, New York City chose the young, brilliant, and dashing Zohran Mamdani in the Democratic primary for Mayor. The City is now likely to have a new Mayor who is a democratic socialist, who speaks truth to Trump’s power, who stands up for Palestine, and who has galvanized the youth vote. His win is a rebuke to Trump, to those who try to paint criticism of the Israeli government as antisemitism, and to all centrist Democrats.
Mamdani identifies clearly, and proudly, as Muslim.
An...
April 16, 2025
Reclaiming My New Orleans Family
My Jewish family left New Orleans four generations ago, after a series of tragedies. But today, I feel a spiritual connection to the city, and I am doing all I can to reclaim my heritage there. To understand the gothic drama of this story (my husband suggests I write it as a ghost story), you have to go back 150 years, to my great-great-grandparents, Newman and Gusta Adler.
The Adler saga is now included in the marvelous Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, which opened in New Orl...
February 28, 2025
Interfaith Families and Identities in Pew’s New Religious Landscape Study
Graphic: Pew ResearchIt has been a full decade since Pew released their last national Religious Landscape Study, so the arrival this week of the 2023-24 version sent everyone in the religion world scurrying to see what has changed, and what has not.
For me, these studies are always an opportunity to look at how Pew is viewing interfaith families and interfaith identities. And this year, I asked Pew some follow-up questions, about people who claim more than one religion, as I did ten year...
February 12, 2025
From Outlaw to In-Law: Book Review
I am afraid I am not the least bit objective on the topic of Tanya Sadagopan’s new book, From Outlaw to In-Law: How Multicultural Couples Can Become Agents for Social Change. My hearty endorsement is printed on the back cover:
“…the first book to document at length how interfaith couples are inspired to become activists. It is an important addition to the growing body of literature detailing the lives of interfaith couples, and how their bravery and compassion helps to create a more flu...
January 5, 2025
Being Both: 2024 Interfaith Highlights
As an interfaith activist, 2024 was a strange year for me (and for many interfaith activists).
Working to support interfaith families felt surreal, given the continuing destruction of Gaza. At the same time, I did not feel I could desist from my life’s work now. Sometimes the double-whammy of the continuing pandemic (I have covid right now) and the genocide made me want to give up and retire. But I did not have the heart to turn away couples who came to me for support, or religious leader...
December 12, 2024
8 Ways to a Peaceful December in Interfaith FamiliesMy li...
My little sister and I, in our interfaith family in 1964.This year, the eight nights of Hanukkah start on December 25th. Although that may sound overwhelming, this year’s timing provides space for both holidays. By the time you light the first Hanukkah candles, Christmas celebrations (on Christmas Eve and morning) will be over. And, Hanukkah does not have to compete with the busy season of holiday concerts and office parties leading up ...
December 5, 2024
Gingerbread Dreidels: Book Review
Books featuring interfaith kids are still few and far between. So I welcome a new picture book centered on the fact that Hanukkah starts this year on Christmas Day. It’s a heartwarming addition to the small collection of books about families that celebrate both holidays. (And I have just added it to my roundup of many of those books all in one place, here).
Gingerbread Dreidels was written by Jane Breskin Zalben, an experienced children’s book author. As it happens, Zalben’s many books on...
December 2, 2024
Dance of Hanukkah and Christmas: 8 Tips for 2024
By now, if you live in a Jewish and Christian interfaith family, you are probably aware that the first night of Hanukkah this year falls on Christmas. And in my opinion, that timing is really not a big deal.
After many decades of celebrating both, I have experienced every configuration of the two holidays, on multiple occasions. Although Hanukkah usually falls earlier (between Thanksgiving and Christmas), I have experienced Hanukkah starting on Christmas Day in 2005, and Hanukkah startin...
November 26, 2024
Interfaith Families and Interfaith Work: Q&A on the New Toolkit
Last March, on instagram, I ran across a new website in the UK called My Mixed Heritage. And I noticed there was a quote from me on the “About” page! It was exciting to discover another interfaith kid out there, across the Atlantic, creating space for people with multiple religious ancestry. I got in touch, and learned that Dalia El Ariny is an anthropology PhD student in London. She grew up in an Egyptian/Muslim and Italian/Catholic family, in Milan, while I grew up with a Jewish parent and...
October 10, 2024
Three Questions About “Nobody Wants This”
Dozens of writers, including every expert on interfaith families that I know (and yes, I think I know all of them) have now weighed in on the hit rom com “Nobody Wants This.” The Netflix show is about a romance between a “hot rabbi” (played by Adam Brody) and a sex podcaster who is not Jewish (played by Kristen Bell). But even after reading a dozen opinion pieces on the show, I realized no one was looking at it from my perspective. So here we go!
The show, about a blond agnostic from a C...


