November 28, 2024

Unpacking the Iggerot: Mikve, Money & Mysticism

What happens when halakha and kabbala clash? Moshe Kurtz explores how R. Moshe Feinstein either valued or objected to the incorporation of mystical and hasidic concepts into normative halakhic practice.
November 26, 2024

RESPONSE: Celebrating Bat Mitzva

Responding to a recent column in Moshe Kurtz’s “Unpacking the Iggerot” series, Yitzchak Blau draws our attention to a difference of tone and orientation between rabbis Moshe Feinstein and Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg concerning celebrating a Bat Mitzva and the induction of young women into serious and mature Jewish life and learning.
November 24, 2024

REVIEW: On Settler Colonialism

Adam Kirsch’s “On Settler Colonialism” (W.W. Norton) aims to explain the rise and appeal of a flawed academic theory, its fixation with Israel, and why it must ultimately fail. Sruli Fruchter reviews…
November 21, 2024

TRADITION Questions: Lonely Men of Courage and Humility

To commemorate Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks’ fourth Yahrzeit, TRADITION turns its questioning gaze inward. Last year was the 50th anniversary of R. Sacks’ first major publication, “Alienation and Faith.” The essay probed a core assumption of R. Soloveitchik’s “Lonely Man of Faith”—the Jew is fated to an existence that is divided, alienated, and lonely. At the young age of 25, R. Sacks disagreed. Chaim Strauchler examines the article’s publication and reception.
November 20, 2024

Remembering the Thought Worlds of Rabbi Sacks

As the Jewish world prepares to mark the 4th yahrzeit of Rabbi Jonathan Sacks zt"l tomorrow, 20 Marheshvan (Thursday, November 21) we republish Dr. David Shatz's insightful testimonial to the impact of R. Sacks as an original Orthodox thinker. During those dark days of Covid when we lost R. Sacks' important voice, TRADITION offered a variety of content memorializing him and exploring his teachings. See the links appended to this post to review those items, and visit the Rabbi Sacks Legacy site to participate in the Global Day of Learning.
November 17, 2024

REVIEW: Articles of Faith

If we don’t knee-jerk our way through life, we can find ourselves without a clear and obvious ideological home. Gil Student’s “Articles of Faith” (Kodesh Press) reminds us we are not alone, shows examples of how to think through thorny issues of our day, and beckons us to remember truth is found by careful and judicious search. Gidon Rothstein reviews…
November 14, 2024

Unpacking the Iggerot: Appliances and Affluence

The kashrut status of dishwashers and the propriety of Bat Mitzva ceremonies have absolutely nothing to do with each other, right? Ostensibly, that may be true. But, Moshe Kurtz digs below the surface to identify the common theme that emerges from this odd pairing of topics addressed by R. Moshe Feinstein in a short, yet iconic responsum.
November 12, 2024

RESPONSE: Peeking Through the Slaughterhouse Window

Rabbi Prof. Daniel Sperber responds to a recent review of his book “Vegetarianism, Ecology, and Business Ethics” (Urim Publications). Having seen abattoirs up close he defends his critique of contemporary kosher slaughter standards against the critique of his reviewers.
November 10, 2024

PODCAST: Maimonides as Rabbi and Philosopher

Writing for TRADITION, Menachem Kellner recently reviewed ArtScroll’s new anthology of Maimonidean philosophy, “Kisvei HaRambam: Writings of Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon,” and profiled “The Guide to the Perplexed: A New Translation” (Stanford University Press). With some critical reservations in place, in this podcast with Jeffrey Saks he applauds ArtScroll for a new openness to exposing its readers to Maimonides the philosopher, and praises the new translation of the Guide as an important corrective to earlier works that occluded the fact that “Rambam was also a rabbi”!