The Man Who Predicted the Fall of the Shah Predicted the Fall of the Islamic Republic
Uri Lubrani.
April 22, 2026
A new book seems deliberately to ignore Jewish suffering.
For Zionists, the formation of a Jewish state marked an end, even if an incomplete one, to centuries of Jewish suffering and lack of self-determination. But what if the diaspora wasn’t so bad after all? That’s the claim David Kraemer, an expert on the talmudic era, makes in his new book. And unlike some works from the past few years, it’s not a fashionable moral argument—it doesn’t praise Jewish powerlessness and lament Israel’s imagined sins. Shai Secunda writes in his review that Kraemer pulls together much interesting history, mixed with occasional shoddy scholarship and some “blithe half-truths.”
Uri Lubrani.
Jewish Britons are increasingly sick of hearing that there is “no place for anti-Semitism” in their country.
The Supreme Court should rule unanimously on a fundamental question of religious freedom.
A new book seems deliberately to ignore Jewish suffering.
“Recognition from even one of the Arab countries would be worth far more.”
For Zionists, the formation of a Jewish state marked an end, even if an incomplete one, to centuries of Jewish suffering and lack of self-determination. But what if the diaspora wasn’t so bad after all? That’s the claim David Kraemer, an expert on the talmudic era, makes in his new book. And unlike some works from the past few years, it’s not a fashionable moral argument—it doesn’t praise Jewish powerlessness and lament Israel’s imagined sins. Shai Secunda writes in his review that Kraemer pulls together much interesting history, mixed with occasional shoddy scholarship and some “blithe half-truths.”
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
Subscribe Now