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What a Divided Jerusalem Would Look LikeThursday, April 1, 2010 by David M. Weinberg | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Instead of bringing peace, partitioning the city will destroy it.
Easter
Around the world this weekend, Christians are preparing to celebrate Easter, the holiday marking the death and resurrection of Jesus and the culmination of the period of penitence that began with Ash Wednesday on February 17. The first bishops in Jerusalem were Jews, and so the early Christian community commemorated the Feast of the Resurrection on the fourteenth day of the Hebrew month of Nisan, coinciding with the Jewish festival of Passover. In Temple times, the essential rite of Passover was the slaughter of a paschal lamb; the Christian Bible explicitly tied this ritual with Rome's crucifixion of Jesus:...
The Sabbath WorldThursday, April 1, 2010 | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Features
Around the world this weekend, Christians are preparing to celebrate Easter, the holiday marking the death and resurrection of Jesus and the culmination of the period of penitence that began with Ash Wednesday on February 17. The first bishops in Jerusalem were Jews, and so the early Christian community commemorated the Feast of the Resurrection on the fourteenth day of the Hebrew month of Nisan, coinciding with the Jewish festival of Passover. In Temple times, the essential rite of Passover was the slaughter of a paschal lamb; the Christian Bible explicitly tied this ritual with Rome's crucifixion of Jesus:...
Monday, March 29, 2010 by Rebecca Newberger Goldstein | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Even to one who doesn't observe the Jewish day of rest, Judith Shulevitz's new book makes an almost irresistible case for it.
Seder’s End
The four cups have been drunk, the story has been told, and all have cried "Next Year in Jerusalem." Now comes the final act, one that, the late hour notwithstanding, it would be a pity to miss. The closing pages of the Haggadah, a mix of sacred hymns and humorous songs, highlight the entire narrative's arresting mix of playfulness and pedagogy, the fine line it walks between the memory of slavery and persecution and the celebration of survival and destiny. The hymns, most of them seemingly unconnected to the Seder itself, widen its angle of vision as we venture out to...
Anti-Semitism and the RecessionMonday, March 29, 2010 | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Features
The four cups have been drunk, the story has been told, and all have cried "Next Year in Jerusalem." Now comes the final act, one that, the late hour notwithstanding, it would be a pity to miss. The closing pages of the Haggadah, a mix of sacred hymns and humorous songs, highlight the entire narrative's arresting mix of playfulness and pedagogy, the fine line it walks between the memory of slavery and persecution and the celebration of survival and destiny. The hymns, most of them seemingly unconnected to the Seder itself, widen its angle of vision as we venture out to...
Monday, March 29, 2010 by Jerry Z. Muller | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Notably, and unlike in earlier times, America's current economic troubles are not being blamed on "the Jews."A Life with God
Monday, March 29, 2010 by Jay Lefkowitz | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
In Judaism: A Way of Being, David Gelernter shows, in words and images, how Jewish experience echoes through and across all of Western experience.Unsplitting the (Song of the) Sea
Monday, March 29, 2010 by Abraham Rabinovich | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
Two long-separated fragments from a rare 8th-century Torah scroll are on dramatic display at Jerusalem's Shrine of the Book.Scholar and Mentor
Monday, March 29, 2010 by Ada Rapoport-Albert | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
On the death at niney-three of a historian, bibliographer, and influential Jewish-studies professor at Oxford and the University of London.Silent Majorities
Friday, March 26, 2010 by Hani Hazaimeh | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
For visiting Israel and publishing in an Israeli newspaper, a Jordanian journalist has been openly denounced—and privately applauded.Monkey Business
Friday, March 26, 2010 by Edward Rothstein | Jewish Ideas Daily » Daily Picks
A New York museum show about Curious George and the refugee Jewish couple who created him depicts the triumph of innocence and mischief—against what, we never learn.