It’s a delight made even more meaningful by its rarity when queer lives are written about with dignity and humanity, well researched and thoroughly considered. ...
This tiny Dutch island, which was home to a cadre of Jewish merchants, became the first international body to recognize the newly minted American government of the former British colonies. ...
As we head in, he squeezes my arm: You know, the Kaddish never mentions death…only God’s goodness. ...
If religious groups could run charter schools, students could be required to attend religious services or be indoctrinated in the tenets of a religion their parents don’t want them to practice. ...
His loopholes are infinite. ...
We feel acutely the longing for connection and continuity along the generations, the questions around the “right” way to honor the dead, fast on Yom Kippur, navigate Christmas or organize a seder or a bris. ...
I hope we’re learning that constantly portraying our community as age-old victims of antisemitism is not helpful. Being marginalized, scapegoated and demonized is not that different from what other “out” groups experience. ...
Caesar’s wild facial expressions and powerful physicality dominated the small screen for only a few years. ...
With an open race for the White House awaiting us in 2028, how will the new wave of campaign autobiographies fit into this mixed stack of self-examiners and self-promoters? ...
On a cold but sunny January morning, two protesters stand outside a Tatte Bakery & Café location in Washington, DC’s Adams Morgan neighborhood. ...
The progressive Jewish mobilization against the oppression of immigrants to the United States is far more than a one-off or occasional cry for justice. ...
Lately I’ve been giving a lot of thought to people who are “irreplaceable.” ...