
Response
After the Ayatollah: Is This the End of Political Islam?
Join Hussein Aboubakr Mansour and Dan Schueftan live to discuss the war, the Islamic political project, and the future of the Middle East.

Response
What Khamenei's downfall won't change.

Observation
Not packaged, not square, not oven-baked. What was it and where does its name come from?
By Philologos
Lesson 3·Images of America: The Story of the United States in Five Works of Art
Rabbi Meir Soloveichik examines what this iconic painting reveals about Lincoln's leadership.

Episode 452·The Tikvah Podcast
A new Haggadah reveals a stunning act of cultural appropriation.

Essay
There's a great deal more at stake in Exodus than getting the slaves out of Egypt. What might it be?

Response
Having lost its audience in the Middle East, the ideology of the Islamic Revolution is finding new adherents in Europe.

Observation
Leviticus asks the individual to constrain himself today so that mankind won't lose its way tomorrow.

Observation
One never hears Jews speak among themselves of Sukkot as the holiday of Booths, or of Rosh Hashanah as New Year's Day. Why the difference?
The real war and the war online.
And, though skeptical of military intervention, he believed the U.S. should encourage it.
A Kafkaesque campaign.
“The Jews, your majesty, the Jews.”
With a poem of praise to the Montefiores.

Episode 105·Poetry and Prayer: A Daily Journey Through the Psalms
The light of God—and possibly our own spiritual light—is a theme of this psalm.

Essay
Understanding wine and the seder with Plato and the Haggadah.

Episode 106·10-Minute Mitzvah
The observance of Passover during Temple times helps reveal how the seder balances two competing Jewish impulses.
By Rabbi Meir Soloveichik
Lesson 6·Jews and the Civil War
American Jews’ reaction to Lincoln’s death tells us a great deal about Passover, Lincoln's legacy, and the spirit of America.

Weekly, in-depth conversations on Jews, Judaism, America, and Israel with leading thinkers, writers, rabbis, and policymakers.

Episode 452·Mar 26, 2026
A new Haggadah reveals a stunning act of cultural appropriation.

Episode 451·Mar 19, 2026
Rejecting eight decades of rejection.

Episode 450·Mar 12, 2026
Decades of human intelligence left the Islamic Republic exposed.

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.

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.
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
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