The Jewish Way to Read the Bible

April 14 2023

Since ancient times, Jews have engaged in what modern academic scholars would call “critical readings” of the Tanakh, argues Yitzchak Etshalom. Drawing on his long career teaching Scripture, Etshalom—in conversation with Ari Lamm—explains what this approach means in practice, and demonstrates it with an analysis of the beginning of the Joseph story. (Audio, 59 minutes.)

Read more at Good Faith Effort

More about: Biblical criticism, Hebrew Bible, Judaism

The Hard Truth about Deradicalization in Gaza

Sept. 13 2024

If there is to be peace, Palestinians will have to unlearn the hatred of Israel they have imbibed during nearly two decades of Hamas rule. This will be a difficult task, but Cole Aronson argues, drawing on the experiences of World War II, that Israel has already gotten off to a strong start:

The population’s compliance can . . . be won by a new regime that satisfies its immediate material needs, even if that new regime is sponsored by a government until recently at war with the population’s former regime. Axis civilians were made needy through bombing. Peaceful compliance with the Allies became a good alternative to supporting violent resistance to the Allies.

Israel’s current campaign makes a moderate Gaza more likely, not less. Destroying Hamas not only deprives Islamists of the ability to rule—it proves the futility of armed resistance to Israel, a condition for peace. The destruction of buildings not only deprives Hamas of its hideouts. It also gives ordinary Palestinians strong reasons to shun groups planning to replicate Hamas’s behavior.

Read more at European Conservative

More about: Gaza War 2023, World War II