This Jewish heroine in Marvel is a mutant with phasing powers.
Kitty Pryde/Shadowcat
This iconic Jewish holiday is featured in Moon Knight (2022), showing Marc lighting candles.
Hanukkah
This Jewish Marvel writer co-created Magneto, the X-Men, and more.
Stan Lee
Ramban’s name is inspired by this real medieval Jewish scholar.
Moses ben Nahman (aka Nahmanides)
This holiday, representing the freedom of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt, is referenced in Marvel comics as part of Kitty’s heritage.
this heroes powers wax and wane based on this celestial body
Moon Knight/ Marc Spector
This common Jewish symbol appears on both Magneto's costume and the gravestone of his family.
This DC Comics writer reimagined Batwoman as Jewish in the 2000s.
Greg Rucka
This Israeli city is often referenced in Sabra’s stories.
Tel Aviv
this charter is the brother of Golem and fought against the invaders in WW2
who is blue bullet/Johann Goldstein
This Marvel character, whose origins as a mutant are shaped by the traumatic events of the Holocaust, famously says, "Never again."
Magento/Max Eisenhart
These twin mutant heroes struggle with their identity, being Jewish and Romani, in his storylines during the 1960s and 1970s.
Quicksilver/Pietro Maximoff and Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff
born Jacob Kurtzberg this Jewish artist co-created Captain America in 1941.
Jack Kirby
Ruth Bat-Seraph name and origin reflect this nickname for native-born Israelis, often symbolizing toughness.
Sabra (prickly pear cactus)
This hero inspired by Jewish folklore, made his first appearance in Marvel comics in this title, where he battled alongside superheroes like Spider-Man.
Golem/Jacob Goldstein
this modern Gotham heroine is openly Jewish
The Hayoth team is inspired by this type of real-world Israeli group.
Mossad
This Jewish writer elevated Kitty Pryde’s prominence in X-Men.
Chris Claremont
Magneto’s backstory is directly tied to this real-world tragedy.
The Holocaust
This superhero was created by Jack Kirby to fight the Nazis during World War II
this DC mystic, draws power from the spiritual tradition of Kabbalah
Ramban
This Marvel character’s bar mitzvah was shown in X-Men Unlimited.
The Thing/Ben Grimm
This real-world comic book artist revealed Ben Grimm’s Judaism in Fantastic Four (Vol. 3) #56.
Karl Kesser
Gabrielle Haller was introduced during Marvel stories set in this war-torn region.
Israel during Middle Eastern conflict
This early Jewish superhero fought Nazis during World War II in The Fighting American.
The Fighting American/ John Flagg