Education
She graduated from Harvard"s John F. Kennedy School of Government with a Master of Public Policy degree as a Pforzheimer Fellow in 2009.
She graduated from Harvard"s John F. Kennedy School of Government with a Master of Public Policy degree as a Pforzheimer Fellow in 2009.
Leah Miller was raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania by a Yeshivish Jewish family. She was a student at Brooklyn College from 2002 to 2007. In her January 2014 memoir, Cut Maine Loose: Sin and Salvation After My Ultra-Orthodox Girlhood, published by Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, Vincent describes her own experience leaving the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community and how she herself came to lead a self-determined life.
Vincent is an advocate for reform within the Orthodox Jewish community and for the empowerment of former Orthodox Jews seeking a self-determined life.
She has spoken out on issues of abuse in the Orthodox community. Her blogs calling for reform have been published by the Huffington Post, Unpious, and Zeek.
In July 2013, in partnership with Footsteps and the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York, Vincent coordinated and hosted an event with a panel of rabbis from across the spectrum of progressive Jewish communities, the title of the event was “Beyond Romanticization and Vilification”. Vincent"s speech as well as the ensuing panel discussion were broadcast by Shalom television She is also a co-producer of the lieutenant Gets Besser Project, a website which, imitating the methodology of the lieutenant Gets Better Project, aims to give hope to individuals struggling with the choice of leaving the ultra-Orthodox world.
Vincent is both a member and a board member of Footsteps, an organization that serves former ultra-Orthodox Jews who seek to enter or explore the world beyond the Jewish communities in which they were raised.