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

In God They Trust?

 

Stick an average alumnus of the Israeli public school system into a synagogue during morning prayers, and chances are they would be bewildered. Even if they could recollect an arid Bible class they had to endure long ago, what good would it do them? They'd still be lost.

A Portrait of Israeli Jews  Asher Arian, Ayala Keissar-SugarmenAvi Chai and Israel Democracy Institute.  Most Israeli Jews feel a sense of affinity—variously defined—to their country and the Jewish people. (PDF)  SAVE

A Jewish Public School  Ben HartmanJerusalem Post.  Parents in Ra'anana, a middle class Israeli town, successfully lobby for a "pluralist, traditional public school." It only took 14 years.  SAVE

Returning to God  Haim ShineIsrael Hayom.  Some of Israel's founders may have envisioned Jews without God, but their descendants are coming home in droves.  SAVE

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Whose Holocaust?

 

For much of Europe, today is the UN-designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has dedicated his address this year to children murdered by the Nazis, with the message that "the best tribute to the memory of these children is an ongoing effort to teach the universal lessons of the Holocaust, so that no such horror is visited upon future generations."

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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"

Pay to Pray?

 

In the middle decades of the 20th century they were called "mushroom synagogues." They popped up in the waning days of summer to provide High Holiday services, then disappeared at the conclusion of Yom Kippur. Today, "mushroom synagogues" are once again in vogue—but with a critical difference.

The High Cost of American Jewish Living  Jack WertheimerCommentary.  The economic recession has exacerbated an ongoing and multifaceted crisis.  SAVE

High Holy Day Scalpers  Chabad of East Bruswick solves comedian Larry David's ticketing dilemma. (Video)  SAVE

Free Tickets to Non-Members?  Steve Friedman, Maxine SukenikRJ.org.  Two presidents of Reform congregations debate the issue.  SAVE

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Insight & Analysis

The Hermeneutics of Hasidism  Zackary Sholem BergerTablet.  Although writers who reject the Hasidic world capture public attention, the really interesting literature comes from writers who struggle with Hasidism but love it too much to leave.  SAVE

There’s a Key in My Challah!  Jeffrey SaksTorah Musings.  Does the post-Passover tradition known as "shliss challah" derive from symbolic readings of the season's texts—or, rather, is it a Christian symbol of Jesus rising in the dough?.  SAVE

P.O.R.K.  Leah SternTimes of Israel.  "Our children have suddenly become ultra-Orthodox. What do we do?" P.O.R.K. to the rescue!.  SAVE

The Carp in the Bathtub  Alan DeutschmanSalon.  In the Brooklyn of the writer's youth, they didn't know from ahi tuna, but carp made good pets—and great gefilte fish, too.  SAVE

Trailing the Rabbis’ Breadcrumbs  Judith ShulevitzTablet.  What is man? He who is capable of searching inside himself. What does he search for? Some dark or foreign matter that he has put there himself. With what does he search? The light of God, which is also in himself.  SAVE

Making a Hash of the Haggadah  Michael MedvedCommentary.  The impulse to revise and update the prescribed Passover service remains unquenchable, yielding results that range from the odd to the preposterous.  SAVE

Freedom Tales  Yehudah MirskyJewish Ideas Daily.  From a medieval manuscript to the script for an interfaith seder, a new crop of Haggadot shows that the old words still hold their own.  SAVE

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