-
David Grossman: The Dissenting Patriot
In 1987, the editors of the Israeli weekly newsmagazine Koteret Rashit marked the 20th year of Israeli control of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip by dispatching the young, up-and-coming novelist and journalist David Grossman to spend seven weeks among Palestinians and Israeli settlers living in the West Bank. Read More » -
2016 Guide To Cultural Arts
-
Reframing Roman Vishniac’s Legacy
-
Is Free Speech Under Fire on Campus?
-
TEMPORARY JOB OPENING
-
Ask the Rabbis // Voting
-
Jewish Word // BDS
-
Louise Lawrence Israëls’ Story: “Being Free Means Eating Cookies”
"My name is Louise Lawrence Israëls and I am a survivor of the Holocaust." Read More » -
Interview: The “New Jews” of Latin America
-
An Ancient Community Gets a Young Leader
-
Nesse Godin’s Story: “Don’t Let Us Be Forgotten”
-
The Rise of the Vegan Seder
-
Q&A: What Is Jewish Terrorism?
Daniel Byman, director of research and a senior fellow in the Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution and a professor at Georgetown University's Security Studies Program, on the roots of Jewish terrorism and what can be done to address it. Read More » -
What is the Future of Religious Freedom in the United States?
-
Is The Two State Solution Dead?
-
Jewish Ethics: Hillel and Shammai Weigh in on Gun Rights
-
How Should the Jewish Community Respond to Syria?
-
The Bedouin Dilemma
Struggles over land & identity are at the heart of growing tensions between the Israeli government & its once-nomadic citizens. Read More » -
Ruth Bader Ginsburg: “The Notorious RBG”
-
From Pickles to Salmon, the Joys of Kosher-Style
-
Jewish Word | Tsuris
-
Is This The Golden Age of Jewish Baseball?
-
Is Free Speech Under Fire on Campus?
Over the past few months, a series of student protests has erupted across the United States on campuses such as Amherst, Dartmouth, Ithaca, the University of Missouri and Yale. While the specific spark of each protest has differed, their substance has been of like mind: Students are contending that their administrations have neglected an obligation to address bigotry, discrimination and intolerance, and specifically racism. Read More » -
An All-Women Symposium: The Missing XX-Factor
-
Symposium // Is There a “Jewish” Way to Parent?
-
If There Were One Thing You Could Change About The Israeli Rabbinate
-
Religion & Violence // A Moment Symposium
-
Talk of the Table // Ethiopian Food
Ethiopian food, famous for its spicy stews and the spongy flatbread called injera, burst onto the international food scene—especially in the United States—in the 1970s and 1980s, when thousands of Ethiopians fled political turmoil in their home country. Read More » -
Talk of the Table // Shakshuka
-
Talk of the Table // Olive Oil
-
Talk of the Table // Paprika
-
Slivovitz: A Plum (Brandy) Choice
-
Book Review // Sailor and Fiddler
I recently asked undergraduates in my Jewish literature class at George Washington University whether the name Herman Wouk meant anything to any of them. Not a single hand went up; not a single nod of recognition. Caine Mutiny? No response. Read More » -
Book Review // Disraeli: The Novel Politician
-
Book Review // Alexandrian Summer
-
Book Review // Before Auschwitz: Jewish Prisoners in the Prewar Concentration Camps
-
Author Interview // Geraldine Brooks
Moment Magazine The Next 5,000 Years of Conversation Begin Here



























