To our readers:
In observance of Shavuot, Jewish Ideas Daily will not publish on May 28.

A Real Titanic Love Story

 

One hundred years ago today, the RMS Carpathia pulled into New York's Pier 54 carrying 705 survivors of the Titanic disaster. Most of the survivors were women and children from first class. But Ida Straus, one of the wealthiest and possibly one of the oldest women on board, was not among them.

“Where You Go, I Go.”  James CameronYouTube.  The scene from the movie Titanic in which Isidor and Ida decide to die together—deleted, unfortunately, from the final cut. (Video)  SAVE

To the Lifeboats  Titanic: the MusicalYouTube.  In the Broadway recounting of the story, Isidor and Ida's heroism makes it onto the stage. (Audio)  SAVE

Kashrut aboard the Titanic  Marshall WeissJTA.  Midway in the great wave of East European Jewish immigration to America, passenger lines began serving kosher food, mainly to immigrants in steerage.  SAVE

SAVE "A Real Titanic Love Story"

Reading between the Lists

 

As long as humans have been writing, humans have been making lists and ranking things. The new Daily Beast/Newsweek list of "America's Top 50 Rabbis for 2012" is, like most American lists, whether of rabbis, cars, or colleges, designed to shape reality as much as reflect it.

American Jews, American Judaism  Ruth R. Wisse, Jack WertheimerStandpoint.  Two leading scholars meet to discuss the state of contemporary American Jewish life and the challenges to it from within and without. Is there cause for optimism?  SAVE

Haunted Houses  Allan NadlerJewish Ideas Daily.  The most consistent feature of synagogues in the land of the free is a chronic inchoateness marked by extreme architectural, spiritual, and liturgical malleability, and an almost endless shiftiness.  SAVE

Spirituality Lite  Aryeh TepperJewish Ideas Daily.  The Jewish Renewal Movement is brimming with avowedly noble aspirations. Why are the movement and its writings so shallow?  SAVE

SAVE "Reading between the Lists"

Peter Beinart, I Quit.

 

Peter Beinart's new blog on the Daily Beast titled Open Zion (formerly Zion Square) is dedicated to an "open and unafraid conversation about Israel, Palestine, and the Jewish future."  But after several weeks of Open Zion, one writer has concluded that its conversation is not, in fact, open—and is not one in which he can continue to take part. Here, he resigns his position. 

SAVE "Peter Beinart, I Quit."

Scholarship and Anti-Semitism at Yale

 

Almost a year has passed since Yale University shuttered the five-year-old Yale Interdisciplinary Initiative for the Study of Anti-Semitism, known by the unwieldy acronym "YIISA," and replaced it with the Yale Program for the Study of Anti-Semitism, or "YPSA."

Yale's New Jewish Quota  Ron RosenbaumSlate.  It was a "cowardly, clumsily-executed maneuver," said the columnist, by which Yale abolished the YIISA program.  SAVE

Can Academia Ignore Politics?  Ben CohenForward.  After YIISA's 2010 conference, the PLO protested to Yale's president that since Arabs are Semites, they can't be anti-Semitic.  SAVE

YPSA Begins Awarding Grants  Jane Darby MentonYale Daily News.  Yale's Jewish chaplain explains that we study anti-Semitism to gain a "better scholarly understanding of other prejudices."  SAVE

Follow the Money  Alex JoffeJewish Ideas Daily.  Between 1995 and 2008, Arab Gulf states gave $234 million in contracts and about $88 million in gifts to American universities. What has their money purchased?  SAVE

SAVE "Scholarship and Anti-Semitism at Yale"

Ron Silver's Risk

 

Three years ago today, Ron Silver—actor, director, producer, radio host, and political activist—died of esophageal cancer at the age of 62. Today he is sorely misremembered; but his legacy is worth fighting for.

Politics and Hollywood  Ron SilverC-Span.  In a wide-ranging discussion, Silver speaks about the role of the entertainment industry in public policy and popular culture. (Video interview with Jeff Greenfield)  SAVE

No Conservative  Mark SteynNational Review.  Ron Silver wasn't a conservative. He was a liberal who couldn't see why liberalism required submission to a profoundly illiberal enemy.  SAVE

No Nexus  Paul LesterJewish Chronicle.  Asked to what degree his Jewish beliefs affected his acting, Silver replied: "To a zero degree."  SAVE

SAVE "Ron Silver's Risk"

« Previous 4 | Next 5 »

Insight & Analysis

The Ten Commandments of America’s Jews  Jack WertheimerCommentary.  Go ahead and break the current tablets—here are the new shalls and shall nots.SAVE

American Hebrew Poetry?  Jerome ChanesForward.  One of the best-kept secrets of Jewish American history is the creation of an indigenous Hebrew poetry in the first half of the 20th century.  SAVE

Debate: Zionism and American Jews  Peter Beinart, Daniel GordisTablet/The Current.  The proposition: Zionism is failing and American Jews are hastening its decline. (Video).  SAVE

The Eternal Return  Lazar Berman, Uri SadotCommentary.  The relationship between the United States and Israel is fracturing. The president is pressuring the Jewish state to make painful concessions in return for vague agreements.  Israeli leaders worry that the support of a formerly reliable constituency—American Jews—is slipping away.
The year is 1975.  SAVE

Learn Hebrew!  David HazonyForward.  The cultural gulf between Israel and the Diaspora can be bridged—but only if American Jews decide they want to bridge it.  SAVE

Will Churches Boycott Israel?  Giulio MeottiYnet.  The five biggest mainline Protestant denominations in the United States have all debated or adopted policies intended to divest from or boycott Israel.  And much will be decided in the next few months.  SAVE

Philanthropy Nation?  Suzanne Last StoneHartman Institute.  For a philanthropic culture to develop in Israel, the traditional American-Israeli partnership model requires serious retooling.  SAVE

Voices & Arguments

Vital Signs: Torah and Service

 

Jack Wertheimer

As if from a fantastical time machine, some 300 youngsters disembark in the woods of western Pennsylvania to find themselves at the building site of King Solomon's temple in Jerusalem. In a quick briefing they are introduced to the biblical passages describing the construction project, invited to imagine the challenges confronting the ancient builders—how to move and hoist heavy loads of quarried stone, how to shape metal into giant candelabra—and then immediately drafted into the mammoth task. Only when their labors are complete, two and a half hours later, do they begin the mundane assignment of meeting their counselors and locating their bunks.

Continue Reading "Vital Signs: Torah and Service"  Jack WertheimerJewish Ideas DailySAVE

SAVE "Vital Signs: Torah and Service"

Voices & Arguments

Vital Signs: Torah and Service

 

Jack Wertheimer

As if from a fantastical time machine, some 300 youngsters disembark in the woods of western Pennsylvania to find themselves at the building site of King Solomon's temple in Jerusalem. In a quick briefing they are introduced to the biblical passages describing the construction project, invited to imagine the challenges confronting the ancient builders—how to move and hoist heavy loads of quarried stone, how to shape metal into giant candelabra—and then immediately drafted into the mammoth task. Only when their labors are complete, two and a half hours later, do they begin the mundane assignment of meeting their counselors and locating their bunks.

Continue Reading "Vital Signs: Torah and Service"  Jack WertheimerJewish Ideas DailySAVE

SAVE "Vital Signs: Torah and Service"

Powered by eResources