Forsaking oneâs native country for another place can create an odd mix of new and old identities. ...
The story of the interactions between Jews in Israel and the Jewish and gentile supporters of Israel in the United States is complex and colored by the unique conditions that led to Israelâs birth. ...
Her books have earned Reich a reputation for deep knowledge of Jewish subjects, among them ritual, history, culture and texts; experiences of Jewish women; varieties of religious (particularly Orthodox) observance; the Holocaust and its repercussions; and Israel. ...
The Sassoons were Baghdadi Jewish merchants whose patriarch fled an autocratic Ottoman governor, first to Iran and then, in 1832, to Bombay (todayâs Mumbai). ...
Michael Gordon explores America's response to ISIS throughout the last few presidential administrations in great depth. ...
Allegra Goodman's new novel is the first "Read With Jenna" book of 2023. ...
In The Book of Revolutions, Edward Feld explores the different political traditions that shaped the Torah as we know it today. ...
The stories that David de Jong first reported for Bloomberg News and now recounts in his book Nazi Billionaires document the sordid embrace of the Nazi regime by Germanyâs wealthiest industrial dynasties and those dynastiesâ continued prosperity today. ...
The latest cycle of public panic over book-banningâas distinct from the constant, threatening drumbeat of book-banning itselfâkicked off last January when The New York Times reported that a school board in McMinn County, Tennessee, had withdrawn Art Spiegelmanâs graphic novel/memoir Maus: A Survivorâs Tale from the eighth-grade Holocaust education curriculum. ...
Robert Pinskyâs father, an Orthodox Jewish optician in Long Branch, New Jersey, liked to sum up success stories with a favorite phrase: âIt all worked out okay.â ...
Baron Maurice de Hirsch was one of the wealthiest and most influential Jews of the 19th century, but his name is largely forgotten. ...
The Morgenthaus, the late New York mayor Ed Koch once said, were âthe closest thing weâve got to royalty in New York City.â ...