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Digging TiberiasTuesday, February 21, 2012 by Matti Friedman | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Long beloved of archeologists but overshadowed by more famous sites, the ancient metropolis of Tiberias is finally emerging from underneath soil, rubble, and the remnants of an old garbage dump.Mourning, Melancholia, and Maimonides
Tuesday, February 21, 2012 by Jon Sommer | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Perhaps because a number of medieval Jewish philosophers were also mathematicians and astronomers, their writings on suffering offer commonsensical guidance still useful today.The Grapes of Roth
Monday, February 20, 2012 by Daniel Johnson | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
The correspondence of Austrian-Jewish writer Joseph Roth displays his sparkling wit and contrarian sensibilities, but testifies above all to his terminal decline into alcoholism.Newton the Theologian
Monday, February 20, 2012 by Aron Heller | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Known for revolutionizing empirical science, Isaac Newton was also an influential theologian. His writings on Scripture and mysticism (as well as his prediction of the apocalypse) have now been digitized in Israel.Tramp Stamp
Monday, February 20, 2012 by Tom Whitehead | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Suspecting his Communist sympathies, the CIA and MI5 began investigating Charlie Chaplin. Would his missing birth certificate verify the speculation that he was really a Russian Jew?Israel’s African Influx
Monday, February 20, 2012 by Dan Kosky | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
If Netanyahu genuinely wants to control illegal immigration to Israel from Africa, he should be constructing a proper legal process to separate economic migrants from asylum seekers.The False Crusade
Monday, February 20, 2012 by Peter Frankopan | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
The medieval narrative of the First Crusade as a Papal expedition to conquer Jerusalem is still rarely questioned; yet the roots of the Crusade lie not in Rome but rather in Byzantium.
Rose-Colored Glasses
Jacqueline Rose, a noted professor of English in the United Kingdom and the author of many works of literary criticism, has stepped beyond the academic precincts where she first made her name to produce, over the past decade or so, a substantial opus dealing with Zionism and Israel.
States’ RightsMonday, February 20, 2012 by Allan Arkush | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Features
Jacqueline Rose, a noted professor of English in the United Kingdom and the author of many works of literary criticism, has stepped beyond the academic precincts where she first made her name to produce, over the past decade or so, a substantial opus dealing with Zionism and Israel.
Friday, February 17, 2012 by Michael Walzer | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
"There is a sense in which Israel is right now politically a state of all its citizens. The real difficulties are not political, they are cultural, and they arise in every nation state." (Interview by Alan Johnson)The Least of These
Friday, February 17, 2012 by Matti Friedman | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
In 1872, a German architect became one of the only Westerners ever allowed to investigate underneath the Temple Mount. The wooden model he created remains a key source of information for archeologists.