The Pale God

 

Imagine God not as a benign force infusing the universe with love and sustaining it with mercy, and not as a stern judge smiting sinners from on high with his cosmic zap-gun, but as a grandfatherly figure, kind but, truth be told, somewhat out of it, sitting in a corner, tolerant of the various paths his children have chosen.

A Portrait of Israeli Jewry  Asher Arian, Ayala Keissar-SugarmenAvi Chai Foundation.  A comprehensive study of religious behavior among Israeli Jews, worshiping Spinoza's pale God. (PDF)  SAVE

Secularism and Its Discontents  Yehudah MirskyJewish Ideas Daily.  A dependence on the idea of Jewish "tradition" has been a hallmark of Jewish secularists and proto-secularists for nine centuries or so.  SAVE

Spinoza: A Life  Steven NadlerCambridge University Press.  The first complete biography of Spinoza in any language—and a portrait of 17th-century Jewish Amsterdam.  SAVE

Gender Trouble  Yehudah MirskyJewish Ideas Daily.  Israel's secularists have their work cut out for them in implementing their vision of a moderate, state-friendly Judaism.  SAVE

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Celebrity Politics, Israel-Style

 

Just two weeks ago, the always-excitable Israeli political world was abuzz with the news of two famous new Knesset candidates. One of them was a famous son—journalist Yair Lapid, whose father, Tommy Lapid, served as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Justice under Ariel Sharon.

From Hero's Parent to Politician  Shmuel RosnerNew York Times.  A Kadima Party politician complains about his electoral prospects, "No family member of mine was ever kidnapped, so I guess I don't have much chance."  SAVE

Entering the Fray  D.L.Economist.  Most are publicly polite, but some in Likud think Noam Shalit has shown gross ingratitude to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.  SAVE

Just Deserts  Shlomo AvineriHaaretz.  Plato warns in the Republic that democracy is endangered when the public begins to confuse theater with politics.  SAVE

The Rising Price of an Israeli Life  Ronen BergmanNew York Times.  A veteran Israeli military analyst follows the path that led to the thousand-to-one swap for Gilad Shalit's release.  SAVE

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2011: A Year in Books

 

The holidays are over, the coffee-table books have all been unwrapped and set aside, and winter isn't going anywhere for a while. In short, it's time to settle in for some good reading. The literary critic D. G. Myers here presents the 38 best Jewish books of 2011, all of which merit your attention.

2010: A Year in Books  D.G. MyersJewish Ideas Daily.  From the popular to the scholarly, a reader's and buyer's guide to 34 of the best books of 2010.  SAVE

Retrieving American Jewish Fiction  D.G. MyersJewish Ideas Daily.  A historical symposium of some neglected classics, and an introduction to the avot and imahot of American Jewish writing.  SAVE

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Highlights of 2011:
Part II

 

Part II of our round-up of the past year's most popular features on Jewish Ideas Daily. (Part I is here.)

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Part II"

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Insight & Analysis

Building Bridges  Noam DvirHaaretz.  Moshe Safdie, the world-renowned Israeli architect, is shutting down the office he opened in Jerusalem in 1970. The future, it seems, is in China.  SAVE

Reading the Netanyahu Tea Leaves  Zvika KriegerAtlantic.  Does the collapse of recent Israeli-Palestinian exploratory talks mask an increased flexibility in the Prime Minister's position on Israeli control of the Jordan Valley? The Atlantic is hopeful.  SAVE

How Many Came Out of Egypt?  Shlomo KarniTorah Musings.  David Ben-Gurion did the math.  SAVE

The Seed of Israel  David EllensonJewish Review of Books.  He has been accused of heresy and expelled from Shas, but Haim Amsalem's lenient approach to conversion in Israel may yet be a blueprint for a more unified nation.  SAVE

Talking Security, Thinking Demographics  Yoram RabinHaaretz.  Israel's Supreme Court is discussing the security implications of immigration law without explicitly addressing the demographic implications. That will have to change.  SAVE

Channel 10 Facing Chapter 11  Ethan BronnerNew York Times.  The troubles of the Israeli TV station are being cast as part of a broader cultural and political war for control over the judiciary, the reporting of news, and public discourse.  SAVE

Unfit to Print  Ron DermerJerusalem Post.  Netanyahu's senior adviser explains why the Prime Minister "respectfully declined" to write for the New York Times: "We wouldn't want to be seen as "Bibiwashing" the op-ed page.".  SAVE

Q & A

Introducing Hanoch Bartov

 

Introducing Hanoch Bartov


To judge by the many prestigious awards his country has bestowed upon him, and by his prolific output—including ten novels, six collections of short stories, and three books of essays—the eighty-four-year-old Hanoch Bartov should need no introduction. And yet, outside Israel, this master of Hebrew style and quintessential son of the Jewish people and the Jewish state is relatively little known.

Continue Reading "Introducing Hanoch Bartov"  Elliot JagerJewish Ideas DailySAVE

Writing as a Jew  Hanoch BartovCommentary.  "For me, to say ‘I am an Israeli, period,' is to join the long, crooked line of those determined to cease to be."  SAVE

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Q & A

Left in Zion: A Conversation with Elhanan Yakira

 

Elhanan Yakira, professor of philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, has all the credentials of a man of the Israeli Left: born and raised in Tel Aviv as a Zionist and socialist , a lifelong secular Jew, an opponent of West Bank settlements, an advocate of government intervention in economic policy. Yet many of his colleagues on the Left denounce him as a right-winger and a traitor. 

Continue Reading "Left in Zion"  Elliot JagerJewish Ideas Daily.  A philosopher who did not set out to be a Zionist polemicist stirs anger and debate.  SAVE

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Jerusalem Letter

Poets and Warriors

 

Aryeh Tepper

Hayim Nahman Bialik (1873–1934) was the poet of Jewish national rebirth and a leading light of cultural Zionism. To be more precise, he was a power station. Composing poems, writing essays, founding journals, raising up the sparks of Israel's past, Bialik became an essential source of energy for Jewish cultural revival.  

Continue Reading "Poets and Warriors"  Aryeh TepperJewish Ideas DailySAVE

Grand Things to Write a Poem On  Hillel HalkinGefen.  An "autobiography" of Shmuel Hanagid in 64 poems, translated and introduced.  SAVE

Shmuel Hanagid  Peter ColePrinceton University Press.  Selected poems, including the lines cited above, in translation.  SAVE

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