יום שבת, 20 יוני 2026Saturday, June 20, 2026
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יום שבת, ה׳ תמוז תשפ״וSaturday, June 20, 2026
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Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Few Thoughts on the Alleged New World Order

By Dr. Jonathan Spyer

Thanks to the efforts and sacrifices of generations, and with some caveats, a realistic conduct of its affairs, the Jewish state today stands as the military and economic superior of all its rivals, and therefore as a worthwhile and powerful ally in the eyes of those of its neighbors not hostile to it for religious or ideological reasons.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

What ‘Pro-Palestinian’ Really Means

By Jonathan Braun

Their aim isn’t to reduce Israel from the size of New Jersey to that of Rhode Island, say, but to cut the state out of the Middle East entirely.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Don’t Get Comfortable in Egypt: Vayechi, Affluence, and the Quiet Spiritual Cost of ‘Keeping Up’

By Rabbi Yehuda L Oppenheimer

While I do not know what is truly the biggest issue facing Klal Yisrael – what about the intermarriage and apathy consuming the majority of American Jews, the crisis between charedim and the rest of Israeli society, or the frightening rise of antisemitism on both the right and the left? – one cannot deny the corrosive impact of this financial culture.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Priorities for America’s Pro-Israel Community in 2026

By Moshe Phillips

In my view, far too many valuable resources and an extensive amount of energy were spent in generating votes for the American portion of the World Zionist Congress elections. And I say this as a delegate to a previous congress.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Grand(parent’s) Legacy

By Dr. Chani Miller

Now that our grandson is three, it’s easier – not totally possible, but easier – to imagine him as the beneficiary of our legacy. Often, though, it is impossible to imagine myself as the guardian of a legacy since I am still processing the legacy that has been left to me.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Model of Pre-State American Zionism

By Rabbi Aaron I. Reichel

Many American rabbis and other leaders at the time encouraged people to pray for Israel, to pay for Israel, and even to make aliyah, but relatively few did more than preaching, praying, and donating.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

European Erasure, the U.S. National Interest, and Israel’s Security

By Jonathan Braun

The EU–Israel Association Agreement of 2000 cast the Jewish state as a close political and economic counterpart. Over time, EU institutions subordinated that relationship to backing the Palestinian cause.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Mandy Patinkin’s Chanukah Cameo: A Cover for Mamdani’s Record?

By Stephen M. Flatow

A celebrity video that reassures – and misleads – New York’s Jewish community.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Shining The Light of the Future

By Jonah S.C. Muskat-Brown

Just as we gradually educate our children in bite-size pieces of knowledge and wisdom as they develop through life and before they come of age, so too did G-d bring this holy light into this lower realm before its time.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Chanukah in the Shadow of Terror

By Rabbi Efrem Goldberg

It is far too soon to truly process or respond to such a heinous crime. But anyone with a sensitive soul cannot avoid the question that rises unbidden in the heart. How do we light candles, gather with family, sing songs of gratitude, spin the dreidel, and eat latkes in the shadow of such devastating loss and tragedy?

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

What Do Modern Orthodox Jews Stand For?

By Avi Ciment

After parents spend hundreds of thousands of hard-earned dollars, a large number of our kids don’t really believe the Torah is the written word of G-d. Schools don’t teach it. They either assume that kids already believe it, or more than likely, it doesn’t fit into their curriculum.

Headline / Judaism / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Private Shiva: Continuing the Conversation and Responding to Concerns

By Rabbi Larry Rothwachs

Halachic authorities caution against overburdening mourners, and many contemporary guides acknowledge the legitimacy of firm visiting hours or limited access based on the mourner’s needs. Yet even these measures do not always suffice.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The New Anti-Israel Libel that Must Be Rejected

By Jonathan Braun

Hungary is one of Israel’s closest allies in Europe. It consistently supports Israel’s right to use force in Gaza, regularly blocks or dilutes EU and UN statements critical of Israeli actions, and has initiated a withdrawal from the ICC after its obscene attempt to issue an arrest warrant for Netanyahu. When the pullout is completed, Hungary will be the first EU country to have left the Israel-bashing kangaroo court.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Parshat Vayeishev and Lessons in Sibling Rivalry

By Dr. Chani Miller

One of the overarching themes in Sefer Bereishis is sibling rivalry. The outcome of each successive conflict propels the narrative forward, shaping our destiny through events that are sometimes confusing and surprising – especially since the reason why the Torah doesn’t begin with mitzvos and laws is so that we can learn from the actions of our forefathers.

Op-Eds / Perspectives

Playing The Islam Card: The Policy That Keeps Blowing Back

By Jonathan Braun

What was sold in the late 1970s and ‘80s as “playing the Islam card” – treating Islamist insurgents as potential partners and aligning with them to weaken the Soviet Union – produced a recurring cycle of blowback that neither the U.S. nor its allies have been able to escape.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Standing At the Crossroads: The Isaac-Covenant Jew in an Age of Rising Hatred

By Rabbi Yehuda L Oppenheimer

Yitzchak was not universally loved – but he was respected. He was not a trickster or fugitive; he was prosperous, assertive, blessed, and openly acknowledged as such by his neighbors.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

History Education: A Jewish Issue

By Jonathan Braun

Our public square has shifted to social media platforms built to amplify outrage, not accuracy. TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and X reward emotional impact over context, speed over verification, and frictionless sharing over reflection.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Thanksgiving, Hakarat HaTov, And the Responsibilities of an American Jew

By Rabbi Michael J. Broyde

For the Orthodox Jew, Thanksgiving presents a rare opportunity. It is not a religious holiday. It does not ask us to compromise halacha or identity. Instead, it calls us to practice something Jews know almost intuitively: gratitude (hakarat ha-tov).

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Global War On Israel

By Jonathan Braun

The central engine behind this effort is Iran, the only UN member whose leaders declare openly that another member state must be wiped out.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

It’s Time to Embrace Our Solitude

By Rabbi Gavriel Lakser

Our isolation stems from the unique responsibility we have been given in this world.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

From Prutah to Penny: The Enduring Story of Copper's Smallest Coins

By Aaron Oppenheim and Yosef Baker

In your pocket or purse, you may be carrying the modern descendant of that ancient Jewish coin, still copper-colored, still the smallest denomination, still somehow essential despite all logic.

In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Fractal Halacha: Law, Time, & the Sanctity of the Unmapped

By Sam Millunchick

Every map needs margins. The halachic imagination admits this with elegant honesty. It names the unknown – safek, doubt – and gives it rules of its own.

In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

I Can’t Eat That – But It’s Not My Fault: A Letter to My Non-Jewish Co-worker

By Lauren Deutsch

The idea that religion is a personal choice that can be separated from every other identity marker in your life is a fundamentally non-Jewish way of seeing the world.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Mamdani Won; Prepare for the Worst

By Jonathan Braun

He is an unabashed anti-capitalist who will be the chief executive of the city that is the center of the nation’s financial industry – and for generations has symbolized Jewish success and civic influence.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Genocide Lie: What Is Really Happening in Gaza

By Moshe Phillips

Repeating a falsehood again and again doesn’t make it true.

In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Israel: Nation of Miracles

By Jonathan Braun

For a nation its size, Israel’s medical innovation is breathtaking – and deeply moral in its reach, extending humanitarian aid and expertise to developing countries, disaster zones, and conflict areas worldwide.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Why Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes Are a Match Made in Hell

By Alan Zeitlin

People test the waters to see what they can get away with in the world of public opinion. Be sure there are bots praising both Carlson and Fuentes. But there are real people also, posting antisemitic things.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Private Shiva? Comforting a Subject, Not Handling an Object

By Rabbi Larry Rothwachs

Nichum aveilim is indeed a mitzvah, but it is not like eating matzah or shaking a lulav, where the mitzvah is fulfilled through contact with an object.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Veto the Medical Aid in Dying Act

By Rabbi Shlomo Brody and Rabbi Aaron Glatt

The National Council on Disability published a study that detailed the dangers of assisted suicide laws to people with disabilities. It found that safeguards in these laws are ineffective and often fail to protect patients.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Barring Jewish Gymnasts: Echoes of 1936

By Dr. Amy Neustein

What stood out for my mother, as relayed to me, was how difficult it was for Gretel to heal from the assault on her integrity and character by a Nazi regime that discriminated against her because of their unbridled hatred for Jews.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

How to Make Torah Learning Work for Professionals

By Sam Millunchick

Before you study, clarify your question. As you study, speak the words. After you study, note one connection to something you've learned before.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Remembering a Leader, Rabbi Moshe Hauer

By Jeff Cohen

Rabbi Hauer epitomized loving every Jew and making everyone feel like the most important person in the world when he spoke with you.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Rabbi of the People and a Light of Compassion and Chesed

By Dr. Mark A. Young

Before his national acclaim as a leader within the Orthodox Union, Rabbi Hauer built something enduring here in Baltimore – a model of what a synagogue rabbi could and should be.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

My First Simchat Torah

By Naomi Klass Mauer

We were all still in euphoria from Hoshana Rabbah, and the return of the hostages, so we went into the holiday in a very happy frame of mind.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

What Kind of Socialist Is Zohran Mamdani?

By Jonathan Braun

An important figure on the postcolonial left for decades, Mahmood Mamdani has called Israel an apartheid state, championed the BDS movement, and portrayed America as the fountainhead of global evil.

In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The War, The Hostages and Sukkot

By Rabbi Reuven Taragin

We coronate Hakadosh Baruch Hu and ask for His forgiveness together, not as individuals. Hashem is truly king only when we coronate Him together.

In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Gaza Under Hamas: Where the Money Went

By Jonathan Braun

The revenues that Hamas controlled were large enough to transform Gaza into a thriving Mediterranean enclave – a model for Palestinian society. But the Islamist group chose a different path. Prioritizing terrorism and military spending, it invested staggering sums in tunnels and weapons, including rockets and rocket factories.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Simchat Torah: Divine Fire and National Legacy

By Rabbi Moshe Taragin

Throughout history, Torah has at times stood as a Divine, untouchable document, and at other times woven into the currents of Jewish experience, carried and shaped by the people of Israel. Its dual nature – both Divine and national – has been reflected in every generation’s approach to learning, observance, and communal life.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Fighting the Genocide Libel – Two Years After October 7

By Zvi S. Rosen

One would have to be a moral idiot to think the death of 60,000, many of them fighters, is worth comparing or mentioning in the same breath as the industrial murder of 6,000,000 based on ethnicity.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Reflections on a Blood-Stained Kittel

By Rabbi Dr. Shlomo Zuckier

It was especially haunting to see this image: Rabbi Daniel Walker, who valiantly protected his synagogue and tended to his congregants amidst the horrific violence, wearing his traditional white kittel, stained by blood at the bottom. And yet, in the face of this terrible destruction, we see another model of holiness. Sometimes, when the evil cannot be banished, the High Priest must deal with it directly, even if he gets bloodied in the process.

In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The New Yorker Doubles Down On Its Botched Circumcision Piece

By Rabbi Hayim Leiter

The late Rabbi Dr. Lord Jonathan Sacks, during Germany’s attempted ban on brit milah in 2012, pointed out the root of the problem. He deemed the move to be an attack on the Jewish people.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Trump Gives the Palestinians Another Opportunity to Choose Peace

By Jonathan S. Tobin

Like the other peace initiatives, the Palestinians have been offered over the past decades, the problem is that it’s by no means clear that they regard a chance to end their long war against the Jewish presence in the land of Israel or even the latest chapter of it that began two years ago as a desirable outcome.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Violent Crime’s Real Root Cause: Bad Policies and Programs  

By Jonathan Braun

That history is worth remembering now.  It is what happens when leaders handcuff the police and abandon law-abiding citizens. And it will happen again if Mamdani wins the mayoralty. The cycle will repeat, and more brutally than before.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Endorsing Candidates from the Pulpit Is Generally Unwise

By Rabbi Michael J. Broyde

Some will argue that silence is cowardice, that in critical times rabbis must declare who to vote for. That is nonsense.

Headline / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Best Parenting Tips from Shark Tank’s Parenting Expert

By Sarah Pachter

Most kids tell you what they need, even if they don’t have the words. If we hover over their homework and they can’t say ‘stop pressuring me’ or ‘trust me to do it,’ they might say something disrespectful. But they always try to tell us what they need.

Archives+ / Featured / In Print / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Chanukah Candles: Publicizing Historical Truth And Appreciating Truth in its Own Right

By Rabbi Judah Kerbel

If the mitzvah of lighting candles is zecher l’Mikdash, then some form of mehadrin can be compared to other forms of hiddur mitzvah. But if the mitzvah is for pirsumei nisa, then mehadrin, especially mehadrin min hamehadrin, takes on new significance.

MUSSAR – Avi Ganz

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By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

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