
Lesson 3Why Do Jews Do That?
Why Do Jews Do That? The Sabbath Blessing
Rembrandt, Oppenheim, and the blessing of children.
Essay
Today’s Islamism pretends to retrieve the sacred through the techniques of the profane.
Lesson 2·The Jewish Meaning of Memory
Explore how the rabbis thought about the saddest day of the Jewish year.
Episode 417·The Tikvah Podcast
A new program offering authentic education about the Middle East.
Observation
Squeezed between two realities on the Golan Heights.
Observation
Operation Midnight Hammer deals a blow to the anti-Western alliance.
Observation
The unusual appellation testifies to the individuality of the character who bears it.
Essay
A personal look at the 25 years that have passed since the bombing of an Argentine Jewish center that killed 85 people, with no progress toward justice.
Why complaints about the “weaponization of anti-Semitism” fall flat.
A reverend reflects on anti-Semitism and hatred of Israel.
Stabilizing, strengthening, and preparing for a significant leap forward.
A new book on a vibrant and unreported reality.
Tyrant, political operator, and builder of Jerusalem.
Episode 201·10-Minute Mitzvah
A Talmudic tale teaches that all of God's creations can play a holy role.
Lesson 12·Sacred Time: The Jewish Holidays
Why do we still mourn ancient Jerusalem’s destruction when we have so much to celebrate today?
Essay
The state of Israel reminds us that the Jewish story is anything but normal.
Lesson 5·Jews and the Civil War
General Grant gave an order expelling Jews from large parts of America, but Jews still mourned him. Why?
Weekly, in-depth conversations on Jews, Judaism, America, and Israel with leading thinkers, writers, rabbis, and policymakers.
Episode 418·Jul 18, 2025
Explore how the Jewish people commemorate past tragedies during the Three Weeks, featuring insights from Rabbi Jacob J. Schacter and music by Paul Ben-Haim.
Episode 417·Jul 11, 2025
Universities fail to teach Middle East complexities, fueling activism. Satloff's new program aims for unbiased education on Israel's history.
Episode 416·Jul 4, 2025
Yuval Levin explores Nehemiah's wisdom, urging us to rebuild and defend American culture, blending ancient insights with modern civic challenges.
With Rabbi Meir Soloveichik
Rabbi Soloveichik explores the history and hidden depths of Jewish ritual through the extraordinary art of Moritz Daniel Oppenheim. Oppenheim brought Jewish ritual to life as no other modern artist has. In this course, Rabbi Soloveichik will study his paintings to uncover the spiritual meaning, historical context, and enduring relevance of the Jewish practices and people he depicts.
With Dr. Ruth Wisse
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Jews flooded into the United States. Large numbers settled in New York, fashioning an intellectual community that became the basis of American Jewish culture today.
Through essays, poems, novels, and short stories—in Yiddish and English—the writers who formed this “concentrated explosion of intellectual talent” sought to understand what this new country was about, and what it ought to be about. In doing so, they also prompted important changes in America itself.
In this course, the distinguished literary critic Dr. Ruth R. Wisse will explore the writing and ideas of the women and men who made up the first generation of the New York Intellectuals.
With Rabbi Dr. Jacob J. Schacter
Sandwiched between the rabbinic period and the Enlightenment, the medieval period of Jewish history is often an afterthought. It shouldn’t be.
In this online course, the distinguished historian Rabbi Dr. Jacob J. Schacter will bring you on a journey through the events, debates, trends, and formative figures of medieval Jewish history. Over ten fascinating lectures, he’ll show you how the medieval period was a dramatic, vibrant, and significant time in the story of the Jews.
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
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