September 16, 2024

The Ideology of Hesder Revisited

TRADITION and the Rabbinical Council of America recently hosted R. Mosheh Lichtenstein, Rosh Yeshivat Har Etzion, for a conversation revisiting a classic essay from our archives: R. Aharon Lichtenstein zt”l, “The Ideology of Hesder” (Fall 1981), using it as a lens to explore contemporary issues in Israeli religious and civilian life and society and the particular challenges of the current war. Listen to a recording of the conversation on the Tradition Podcast.
September 8, 2024

The Madwoman in the Rabbi’s Attic

TRADITION’s recent Summer issue contains Yitzhak Blau’s review of Gila Fine’s “The Madwoman in the Rabbi’s Attic: Rereading the Women of the Talmud.” In this podcast the reviewer and the author sit down together for a conversation about the book and touch on the relationship between Biblical and Talmudic narrative and teaching values through aggada.
August 26, 2024

“Bittersweet” with Susan Cain

In reviewing Susan Cain’s “Bittersweet: How Sorrow and Longing Make Us Whole” (Crown) for this summer’s TRADITION Book Endorsements, Mail Brofsky drew lessons, strength, and encouragement following the events of Simchat Torah and throughout this year’s long war. In this podcast Cain joins Brofsky to discuss her #1 NY Times bestseller (and Oprah pick), and explore its message for our religious community.
August 4, 2024

R. Feinstein on Brain Death, Revisited

In the area of Jewish medical ethics brain death is the topic which just will not die. No other rabbinic figure’s opinion has factored in quite so significantly on the subject as R. Moshe Feinstein zt”l, however his position have been intensely debated over the years. In a recent piece of research which surfaces some relevant new points of evidence, Dr. Noam Stadlan offers a re-understanding of R. Feinstein’s ruling, with various implications for end of life care and organ donation. In this episode of the Tradition Podcast, Stadlan joins our editor, Jeffrey Saks, to discuss the article, as well as larger trends in the field of Jewish medical ethics, the partnership that should exist between physicians and medical research on one hand with poskim on the other, and why our readers are perennially interested in the field of medical halakha.