The Young Hasidim Bringing Back the Music of Old-Fashioned Cantors

April 3 2024

In his new book, Golden Ages: Hasidic Singers & Cantorial Revival in the Digital Era, Jeremiah Lockwood examines cantors who are moving away from the heavily pop-inflected trends in Orthodox music of the past half-century, and returning to the more operatic stylings that dominated in pre-World War II Europe and America. Lockwood, Matt Austerklein writes,

does what few Jewish musicians dare: to look deeply and critically at the sociological, ideological, and spiritual implications of their musical commitments. Lockwood thus captures in both historical perspective and ethnographic detail the roots of Jewish musical artistry as an individually empowering discipline, with effects that often spill over into nonconformism.

By way of illustration, Austerklein points to this performance, which has all the trappings of a classical concert. (Video, 8 minutes.)

Read more at Beyond the Music

More about: Hasidim, Jewish music, Orthodoxy

How the U.S. Can Retaliate against Hamas

Sept. 9 2024

“Make no mistake,” said President Biden after the news broke of the murder of six hostages in Gaza, “Hamas leaders will pay for these crimes.” While this sentiment is correct, especially given that an American citizen was among the dead, the White House has thus far shown little inclination to act upon it. The editors of National Review remark:

Hamas’s execution of [Hersh Goldberg-Polin] should not be treated as merely an issue of concern for Israel but as a brazen act against the United States. It would send a terrible signal if the response from the Biden-Harris administration were to move closer to Hamas’s position in cease-fire negotiations. Instead, Biden must follow through on his declaration that Hamas will pay.

Richard Goldberg lays out ten steps the U.S. can take, none of which involve military action. Among them:

The Department of Justice should move forward with indictments of known individuals and groups in the United States providing material support to Hamas and those associated with Hamas, domestically and abroad. The Departments of the Treasury and State should also target Hamas’s support network of terrorist entities in and out of the Gaza Strip. . . . Palestinian organizations that provide material support to Hamas and coordinate attacks with them should be held accountable for their actions. Hamas networks in foreign countries, including South Africa, should be targeted with sanctions as well.

Pressure on Qatar should include threats to remove Qatar’s status as a major non-NATO ally; move Al Udeid air-base assets; impose sanctions on Qatari officials, instrumentalities, and assets; and impose sanctions on Qatar’s Al-Jazeera media network. Qatar should be compelled to close all Hamas offices and operations, freeze and turn over to the United States all Hamas-connected assets, and turn over to the United States or Israel all Hamas officials who remain in the country.

Read more at FDD

More about: Gaza War 2023, Hamas, U.S. Foreign policy