A Personal, National, and Biblical Story of Liberation—and Its Relevance for America

Pick
Jan. 18 2022
About Ruth

Ruth R. Wisse is professor emerita of Yiddish and comparative literatures at Harvard and a distinguished senior fellow at Tikvah. Her memoir Free as a Jew: a Personal Memoir of National Self-Liberation, chapters of which appeared in Mosaic in somewhat different form, is out from Wicked Son Press.

Discussing her memoir, Free as Jew: A Personal Memoir of National Liberation—first published serially in MosaicRuth R. Wisse describes the progression from slavery, to freedom, to responsibility, and finally to gratitude. This sequence, she explains in conversation with John J. Miller, is the subject of much of the Torah and the Passover Haggadah, and is part of both the modern Jewish experience and the American. In addition, Wisse addresses the sorry state of the universities, and the need for young people to enter them with an already formed moral sense. (Audio, ten minutes.)

Read more at National Review

More about: American Jewry, Canadian Jewry, Exodus, Harvard, University

What Iran Seeks to Get from Cease-Fire Negotiations

June 20 2025

Yesterday, the Iranian foreign minister flew to Geneva to meet with European diplomats. President Trump, meanwhile, indicated that cease-fire negotiations might soon begin with Iran, which would presumably involve Tehran agreeing to make concessions regarding its nuclear program, while Washington pressures Israel to halt its military activities. According to Israeli media, Iran already began putting out feelers to the U.S. earlier this week. Aviram Bellaishe considers the purpose of these overtures:

The regime’s request to return to negotiations stems from the principle of deception and delay that has guided it for decades. Iran wants to extricate itself from a situation of total destruction of its nuclear facilities. It understands that to save the nuclear program, it must stop at a point that would allow it to return to it in the shortest possible time. So long as the negotiation process leads to halting strikes on its military capabilities and preventing the destruction of the nuclear program, and enables the transfer of enriched uranium to a safe location, it can simultaneously create the two tracks in which it specializes—a false facade of negotiations alongside a hidden nuclear race.

Read more at Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs

More about: Iran, Israeli Security, U.S. Foreign policy