For our 50th anniversary edition, weâre doing some time traveling. First letâs go back to 1975, the year Momentâs first issue (May/June) arrived in the world. It was dreamed up by Momentâs first editorial team, a small group that included cofounders Leonard âLeibelâ Fein (editor) and Elie Wiesel (literary editor), along with Carol Kur (managing editor) and William âBillâ Novak (associate editor). At the time, Elie lived in New York (he would start teaching at Boston University in 1976), while the rest of them worked together in a two-room office in Newton, MA. The office was outfitted with three phone lines and state-of-the-art IBM Selectric typewriters.
Bill was the youngest, a twentysomething at the time, and the only one still alive today. I asked him what it was like back at the beginning. âNone of us knew much about magazines or had much experience as editors,â he says, adding that there was a great deal of excitement. âIt was thrilling to be on the phone with authors and agents.â
As with any time capsule, some things seem antiquated while others exemplify the old saw that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
He remembers Leibel as a smart, charismatic man who smoked a lot and was usually on the phone, his voice ricocheting around the office. âHe was a great speaker,â says Bill, who went on to an illustrious writing career himself that included editing, with Moshe Waldoks, The Big Book of Jewish Humor. He recalls Leibel being very popular with the United Jewish Appeal Federation in New York, âespecially the young leadership division. He could mesmerize a crowd, and he had something to say.â
Momentâs editors, along with publisher Moshe Dworkin, worked together for 18 months (the equivalent of two human pregnancies, and chai, too!) to launch the magazine. It was a hit, the first of hundreds of issues to come that were packed with articles, commentary, symposia, literary and cultural criticism, poems, fiction and art.
Which brings us, just briefly, to 2025. A jubilee anniversary is a big deal in a world where magazines and journals come and go, and Moment is one of the few Jewish publications that have survived. So we, the Moment editors of today, had a gazillion ideas for how to mark the occasion.
One idea was inspired by looking back at that very first issue. Approaching it like a time capsule, we decided to crack it open. Inside were artifacts, from articles to advertisements. We imagined them as encrypted with messages for the future and threw ourselves into decoding them.
The result is the âMoment Time Capsule,â a special section that explores the world as seen from 1975, on topics such as the new Jewish right (Harold Shulweis); the possibility of another war between Israel and her neighbors (Drew Middleton); the competing souls of Israel (an exchange between Robert Alter and Shlomo Avineri); the changing role of women in Jewish life (Susan Dworkin); do-it-yourself Judaism (Bill Novak); language policing (Leonard Fein); the relevance of science fiction (Arthur Waskow); immigrants vs. plutocrats (satire by Calvin Trillin); and the conservative metamorphosis of a Columbia University professor (fiction by David Stern). If it sounds to you as if topics havenât changed much, you are right. Yet, as with any time capsule, some things seem antiquated while others exemplify the old saw that the more things change, the more they stay the same. We also invited our âAsk the Rabbisâ contributors into the time machine, asking: âWhat would astonish a time traveler from 1975 about your denomination today?â
Kicking around the beginning for a bit longer, I know youâll enjoy a selection of advertisements that appeared in Moment in its first year (peddling the merits of 8-track tapes, filtered cigarettes and skiing at a now-closed Borscht Belt resortâwhat can you say, it was the seventies!) as well as Dan Freedmanâs âTalk of the Table,â covering 50 years of Jewish food and featuring fun illustrations from the 1975 edition of the Hadassah Cookbook.
Things get even more ambitious, fellow travelers, as we go back and forth in time. For this issueâs âBig Question,â we asked eleven thoughtful observers (all of whom were alive 50 years ago) to choose dates from the past five decades that in some way shaped the American Jewish experience. This collection touches on political milestones, acts of violence, womenâs rights, Jewish education, art, science, Israel and more.
Itâs a story of us, though hardly definitive, and so Iâd love to hear what you would add (please send your dates to editor@dev.momentmag.com). In âTime Traveling with Moment,â I examine a few developments that early Moment readersâor anyone else in 1975 for that matterâcould never have imagined and also consider the challenges ahead. And in a special edition of âVisual Moment,â Arts & Articles Editor Diane M. Bolz selects 50 Jewish artists from the last 50 years who created music, visual art, architecture and performances that have enriched our lives.
Of course, an issue of Moment wouldnât be an issue of Moment if we didnât delve into current events and pressing issues. Whether you were one of the many who responded to our recent reader survey or not, I think youâll find the results herein revealing, as we gauge the current mood of American Jews. (For complete survey results, go to momentmag.com/reader-survey.) This issueâs âMoment Debateâ (Jamie Raskin vs. William Choslovsky) asks a question that deserves serious discussion: âIs due process always good for the Jews?â In âTranquility Will Have to Wait,â Letty Cottin Pogrebin maintains that despite setbacks for women and for Jewish safety, we have to keep fighting for progress, and Sarah Posner wonders if, in President Trumpâs world, thereâs still religious freedom for all. Fania Oz-Salzberger pinpoints five moments that have shaped Israel, while Shmuel Rosner talks about the Jewish stateâs most important change since 1975 (âItâs not what you thinkâ).
In âJewish Word,â Opinion & Books Editor Amy E. Schwartz takes a deep look into the word âdiaspora,â which started as negative and eventually came to be viewed in a more positive light. And in âLiterary Moment,â Robert Siegel examines Theodore Rooseveltâs relationship to the Jews; Gloria Levitas reflects on David Denbyâs profile of four icons of the so-called golden age (Mel Brooks, Betty Friedan, Norman Mailer and Leonard Bernstein); and Carl Rollyson reveals disquieting aspects of poet Sylvia Plathâs attitude toward Jews. There are also two memorable poems by Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai (1924-2000) chosen from our archives by Poetry Editor Jody Bolz. And finally, be sure not to miss âSpiceboxâ and our 50th anniversary cartoon and caption contest.
A 50th anniversary is a big one, but even this double issue couldnât hold everything. Look for more commemorative projects and half-century lists as the year goes on. And save the dateâNovember 16âbecause weâre throwing a big party here in DC. Youâre all welcome.
Meanwhile, Happy Anniversary to Moment, and thank you to all our wonderful readers!

