
Response
What Role Should Tanakh Play in Jewish Education?
Join Chaim Saiman, Rabbi Ya’akov Trump, and Jonathan Silver for a conversation about how and why Tanakh was sidelined in Jewish education, and why it’s now making a comeback.

Etzem
The unholy temptations of grief tech.

Episode 463·The Tikvah Podcast
Two leading experts on the Middle East offer competing and complementary ways to understand the region.
By Michael Doran, Hussein Aboubakr Mansour
Lesson 1·Images of America: The Story of the United States in Five Works of Art
A meticulously crafted work that embodies the Revolution itself.

Response
The study of Tanakh is vital, but it must avoid becoming unmoored from the rabbinic tradition.

Response
Tanakh forms a national consciousness that is drawing haredi society into the great story of the Jewish return.

Essay
Relearning the language of nationhood.

Response
Join Chaim Saiman, Rabbi Ya’akov Trump, and Jonathan Silver for a conversation about how and why Tanakh was sidelined in Jewish education, and why it’s now making a comeback.

Gleanings
Why should an infinite, all-powerful being choose to rest? Tolstoy had an answer.
But the war on Hizballah is far from over.
Allies abandoned.
The passions behind the New York primary aren’t going away.
Moll Flanders shows that fiction can contain moral teachings.
A community destroyed, forgotten, and revived.

Essay
Jews have expressed their patriotism through prayer from the Revolution to today.

Episode 164·Poetry and Prayer: A Daily Journey Through the Psalms
A verse expressing longing for Jerusalem and a psalm describing the return to Zion.
By Rabbi Meir Soloveichik
Lesson 1·Images of America: The Story of the United States in Five Works of Art
What the iconic painting reveals about the Founding Fathers and America itself.

Episode 39·Parashah and Politics
What Moses taught about leadership that Machiavelli didn't understand.
By Rabbi Meir Soloveichik
Weekly, in-depth conversations on Jews, Judaism, America, and Israel with leading thinkers, writers, rabbis, and policymakers.

Episode 463·Jun 26, 2026
Two schools of thought in action.

Episode 462·Jun 18, 2026
Reading the Hebrew Bible in its natural habitat.

Episode 461·Jun 11, 2026
The Declaration of Independence and Hebraic America.

With Rabbi Meir Soloveichik
The Ten Commandments are central to Jewish faith and ethics—but they are also something more: the very wellspring of the moral and political ideas that shaped Western civilization. In this series, Rabbi Meir Soloveichik takes these ancient words seriously—as revelation, as philosophy, and as a living guide to the crises and confusions of our own moment. Across five illuminating episodes, he explores how the Decalogue gave the world its understanding of freedom, human dignity, family, and faith, and why these words, spoken at Sinai thousands of years ago, still ring with startling clarity today.

With Rabbi Meir Soloveichik
As we approach America’s 250th anniversary, Rabbi Meir Soloveichik examines key moments in the nation’s history—from the revolutionary era to World War II—through a set of iconic images that have shaped the American imagination. Through paintings and symbols both familiar and forgotten, Rabbi Soloveichik explores how Americans have understood themselves, and how visual culture has transmitted that understanding across generations.
In moments of triumph, tension, and transformation, “Images of America” reveals how art both reflects real life and articulates high ideals. Focusing on paintings like John Trumbull’s “Declaration of Independence” and Norman Rockwell’s “Four Freedoms,” Rabbi Soloveichik illuminates how theology, ethics, and political reflection converge in these snapshots of history. Ultimately, this course invites you to see not only what America has been, but what it might yet become.

With Ruth R. Wisse
The great writers of the modern Jewish literary canon captured the struggles, questions, and aspirations of a people entering a new world. Confronted by the promises and perils of religion, Communism, liberty, assimilation, and capitalism, Jews turned to literature to understand—and to confront—the challenges of modern life. What emerged was a rich body of writing, a treasure to which Jews and all thoughtful readers can turn for insight, experience, and moral understanding.
In this nine-part series, Professor Ruth R. Wisse—one of the world’s foremost interpreters of Jewish fiction—guides you through the masterpieces of modern Jewish literature. Through stories by the greatest Jewish writers of the age, you'll see how they wrestled with God and man, tradition and change, suffering and joy—and how their words continue to illuminate both the Jewish and human conditions.
This course, and all of Ruth Wisse's work at Tikvah, is supported by the generosity of Robert L. Friedman.
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
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