"This book is a socially committed intellectual engagement with difficult solidarities and the way to reimagine them. It is precisely through the combination of superb scholarly research and sound caretaking that the authors help us have hope for the future by confronting the never-ending triumphalist discourses of modern coloniality." —Santiago Slabodsky, author of Decolonial Judaism"The book is most suitable for scholars and activists interested in understanding the role of religion in progressive politics and those interested in incorporating religion into intersectional analysis. The Introduction provides an excellent standalone entry point into the literature, and the volume, or parts of it, would work in graduate-level courses in gender and feminist thought and activism, transnational movements, and religion and politics." —Journal of Church and State