Faranak Margolese | |
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Margolese in 2012.
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Born | Faranak Rofeh 1972 (age 45–46) Manchester, England |
Occupation | Author |
Alma mater |
Columbia University Stern College |
Notable works | Off the Derech |
Spouse | David Margolese (m. 2000; div. 2017) |
Children | 3 |
Website | |
offthederech |
Faranak Margolese (born 1972) is an American writer, best known as the author of Off the Derech, a book about contemporary assimilation in the Orthodox Jewish world.
Margolese was born in Manchester, England, in 1972, the great-granddaughter of the former Chief Rabbi of Tehran, Iran. She was raised in Los Angeles, California, to Persian immigrant parents in a traditional Sephardi home. She graduated from Yeshiva University High School of Los Angeles, received a BA in philosophy from Stern College and a Master of Fine Arts in nonfiction creative writing from Columbia University in New York.
From 1995 to 1997, she was an adjunct professor teaching expository writing at Yeshiva University and Queens College.
Margolese conceived of the idea for Off the Derech: Why Observant Jews Stop Practicing Judaism; How to Respond to the Challenge while living in New York City and noticing that many of her friends who had grown up in Orthodox households were no longer observant. She spent five years doing research, conducting interviews and setting up an online survey with people who had left their Orthodox way of life. She also interviewed rabbis, educators, therapists and program directors.
Off the Derech (A Jewish term that means “off the path”) explores the phenomenon of Jews raised in Orthodox households who choose to leave that lifestyle as adults, examining their reasons for doing so and offering preventative measures for the Jewish community to take. Margolese writes that “there is no greater challenge facing the Jewish world today.”
Off the Derech has been called “a groundbreaking book,” with Margolese earning praise for “authoring the first seminal work on contemporary assimilation from the ranks of the previously observant.” Her writing style has been called “extremely lucid and logical.”Rabbi Abraham Twerski endorsed Off the Derech as “mandatory reading for every rabbi, teacher and parent.”Publisher’s Weekly wrote that Margolese’s conclusion (“God cannot be confined to the narrow path we walk... neither can his people”) “will resonate with those of all faiths.”