1. [Critical Sources](https://www.associationforjewishstudies.org/criticalsources). A podcast project co-production of the Association for Jewish Studies, The Taube Center for Jewish Studies at Stanford and Temple University's Feinstein Center for Jewish Studies. The show features interviews with scholars of Jewish Studies, talking about sources (a text, a poem, an object) that is helping them think through the events of [[October 7]] and its aftermaths. Links to the original sources and biographical material can be found on the AJS website, and you can find the podcast wherever you get your listening. 2. [The Berman Archive](https://bermanarchive.stanford.edu/). This is a living, growing, free and entirely digital archive of documentation of, by, and for American Jewish communities. We feature reports, research, conference proceedings, and a handful of publications that are difficult to find or otherwise inaccessible to scholars and professionals in the Jewish community. We fall somewhere between the collective memory of Jewish communal life and an ongoing documentary effort of the same. You can search the archive whenever you want, and you can subscribe to our monthly newsletter, the [Documensch](https://documensch.substack.com/) 3. [The National Study of Jewish Teen Mental Health and Wellbeing](https://www.jewishtogether.org/bewell/research). This project, supported by the BeWell Initiative of the Jewish Federations of North America, my team is surveying American Jewish teenagers (ages 13-18) about their overall sense of well-being. The survey will go into the field in Mid-April, and we plan to have our findings ready for release by fall, 2024.