Will the administration’s new strategy to counter anti-Semitism camouflage its own inaction?
The D.C. veteran joins us to talk about what the government can do to fight anti-Semitism, and what, despite good intentions, it can’t.
A reader’s question prompts Philologos to turn up a crucial link between the three.
An Israeli philosopher joins the podcast to talk about what keeps nations together, even when their populations are so deeply divided.
Why is a phrase from a tractate in the Talmud so similar to one in Paul’s First Epistle to the Corinthians?
The veteran foreign-policy analyst thinks the Biden administration is both strengthening Israeli security and facilitating the greatest threat to it. Can both be true?
The Tikvah CEO addresses the practical and ideological challenges facing Jewish daughters and sons—and mothers and fathers—today.
What were 27,000 ḥaredi men doing in a sports arena in Philadelphia last week, and what does it reveal about their world?
Will shnatz have arrived on the Hebrew scene just in time for it to denote something that no longer exists?
The legendary author joins us to talk about her new short story, about a search for the reason why a 13th-century Jewish man became a Catholic priest.
The eminent scholar talks about Ruth, and Reading Ruth, the 2021 book he co-authored with his granddaughter.
How many rabbis first translated the Hebrew Bible, and how many different translations did they produce?
Open ties between the two nations are in everyone’s interest, but it will take serious intent and deft maneuvering from America to get there. Is the administration up to it?
The author of Self-Made stops by to talk about how the modern self came to be, and how it differs from older, traditional modes of living.