Why a queer Jewish chicken farm is closing itself down

Group+photo+at+Linke+Fligls+final+gathering.+Credit%3A+Walter+Hergt

Group photo at Linke Fligl’s final gathering. Credit: Walter Hergt

Jordan Palmer, Chief Digital Content Officer

On a hot, humid day in late August, Nahanni Rous joined a gathering at Linke Fligl, a queer Jewish chicken farm and cultural organizing project in New York’s Hudson Valley. (Linke Fligl is a pun—Yiddish for “left wing.”) For the past seven years, queer Jews have celebrated holidays, farmed, and built a community on this ten-acre, off-the-grid piece of land—but the project is coming to a close.

In this episode of Can We Talk?, we walk the land at Linke Fligl, talk to people at the final gathering, and hear from founder Margot Seigle about how the project started and why it’s ending.

The Jewish Women’s Archive

The St. Louis Jewish Light is proud to announce a new partnership with the JWA. Together, we will bring many parts of the JWA collection to St. Louis readers, as well as promote the “Can We Talk?” podcast by sharing both current and past relevant episodes each week.

The Jewish Women’s Archive is a national organization dedicated to collecting and promoting the extraordinary stories of Jewish women. JWA explores the past as a framework for understanding the issues important to women today; inspires young people with remarkable role models; and uses Jewish women’s stories to excite people to see themselves as agents of change.