Brooklyn Odyssey: My Journey out of Hasidism

Growing up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn as a member of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic Orthodox Jewish community, Zalman Newfield was raised in an atmosphere of strict gender segregation, rigorous religious education, and nearly all-consuming ritual practices. Trained to be a Lubavitch emissary, he traveled around the world doing Jewish outreach to help usher in the messianic redemption. In Brooklyn Odyssey: My Journey out of Hasidism Newfield describes how he gained perspective through reading, travel, and education and abandoned the faith of his youth.

Brooklyn Odyssey is Newfield’s poignant and hopeful memoir about exiting Orthodoxy. He recounts asserting his individuality and taking the radical step of shaving his beard. Reflective about his upbringing, Newfield is open to and curious about a world beyond Brooklyn while also maintaining his profound bond with his family and Jewish tradition. He writes candidly about his emotional, intellectual, and social experiences in and out of the Lubavitch community.

From pivotal moments of devastation, including the illness and death of his younger brother and of his revered spiritual leader Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, to moments of joyful resolve, including the decision to pursue a doctorate and marry a non-Orthodox Jew, Newfield takes readers on his moving and impactful journey.

Read an excerpt from Chapter 1 (pdf)

“Zalman Newfield has achieved the near impossible in Brooklyn Odyssey—he tells the whole truth, stripped of euphemism, yet filled with heart. Tender, courageous, and deeply human, this book is both beautiful and important. Five stars. I’m proud to give it my highest recommendation.“

Dr. Sara Glass

Author of Kissing Girls on Shabbat: A Memoir

“Zalman Newfield’s journey from his Chassidic roots in Crown Heights makes compelling reading. Humble, innocent, refreshing and informative by turns, I found myself staying up late to read ‘just another few pages.’ Some memoirs of leaving conservative backgrounds are bitter and vengeful. Not Newfield’s. He writes movingly of searching for education and connection in the secular world, without leaving his readers saddened. Bravo!“

Goldie Goldbloom

Author of On Division: A Novel