July 11, 2024

BOOK REVIEW: Shlomo M. Brody, Ethics of Our Fighters: A Jewish View on War and Morality

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July 11, 2024

BOOK REVIEW: Jacob Katz on the Origins of Orthodoxy, edited by Giti Bendheim, Menachem Butler, Jay M. Harris, and Uriel Katz

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July 11, 2024

BOOK REVIEW: Eitan P. Fishbane, Embers of Pilgrimage: Poems

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July 11, 2024

A Chief Rabbinate That Might Have Been

Those interested in the interaction of religion and state have been captivated these last few weeks (in the way train wrecks draw our attention) by the byzantine delays in elections for the Israeli Chief Rabbinate—which for the first time in its history is doubly vacant with neither Ashkenazi nor Sefardi Chiefs. Jeffrey Saks examines a chapter in Rabbi Soloveitchik’s biography, and his flirtation with the position in the early 1960s, which reminds us just how far we are from the Rav’s vision of what a Chief Rabbi might be.