
Essay
There Never Will Be a Palestinian State. So What’s Next?
October 7 was not Palestine’s independence day, but the final nail in the two-state solution’s coffin. Is confederation with Jordan all that remains?
Observation
The historical roots of Israelis’ favorite political epithet.
Episode 425·The Tikvah Podcast
A new era of U.S.-Israel cooperation
Speech
A conversation on religion in the founding, the nature of God, and more.
Essay
October 7 was not Palestine’s independence day, but the final nail in the two-state solution’s coffin. Is confederation with Jordan all that remains?
Observation
Reading Homer in wartime.
Observation
Many people are delighted to be told that Israel is doing to the Palestinians of Gaza exactly what the Nazis did to the Jews of Europe.
A psychological blow.
Eli Sharabi’s memoir of captivity.
“Do not deviate to the left or to the right.”
The oldest such discovery in the world.
A real scholar speaks to the New Yorker.
Episode 239·10-Minute Mitzvah
Two interpretations of the Jewish wedding's glass-breaking ritual speak to the power of Jewish endurance.
Essay
Even several years ago, Columbia University was no longer a welcoming place for Jews.
Episode 55·Bible 365
The biblical approach to monarchy allows us to understand why we coronate God on Rosh Hashanah.
Speech
Rabbi Meir Soloveichik’s 10-part, limited-series podcast exploring the ideas behind the Days of Awe.
Weekly, in-depth conversations on Jews, Judaism, America, and Israel with leading thinkers, writers, rabbis, and policymakers.
Episode 425·Sep 4, 2025
A new era of U.S.-Israel cooperation
Episode 424·Aug 28, 2025
The dust and blood and bronze of the Trojan War come to life in Gaza.
Episode 423·Aug 21, 2025
Has the field lost its way, and can it recover?
With Mrs. Rachel Besser, Dr. Mijal Bitton, Rabbi Shmuel Braun, Dr. Erica Brown, Eric Cohen, Rabbi Mark Gottlieb, Talia Harcsztark, Dara Horn, Dr. Doran 'Dodie' Katz, Rabbi Hershel Lutch, Rabbi Dr. Jacob J. Schacter, Rabbi Dr. Abraham Unger
Where can modern Jews, both young and old and across the spectrum of observance, turn for guidance on timely and timeless questions, on the most urgent and most perennial issues?
For nearly two millennia, Jews from all around the world have dedicated the six Sabbaths between Passover and Shavuot to the regular study of Pirkei Avot, the Ethics (or Chapters) of the Fathers. Pirkei Avot—or Avot, for short—is a section of the Mishna, the first formal codification of the Jewish Oral Law, which portrays the moral-ethical universe of Judaism in all its fullness. These teachings, culled from the sayings of almost sixty sages, stretching over some five centuries, are the building blocks of a Jewish life well-lived. In short, Avot is the foundational text for any authentic transmission of Jewish values and virtues.
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.
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
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