Showing Results 31 - 40 of 78
Restricted
Text
To be human is to remember. To lose memory is to lose a piece of ourselves. To lose all of memory is one of the great human tragedies; some part (though surely not all) of the divine light within us…
Contributor:
Arthur Green
Places:
Philadelphia, United States of America
Date:
2002
Categories:
Restricted
Text
. . . We believe that our outlook on social life in general is more refined and purer than that of contemporary civilized nations. Our family is sacred to us in a manner more profound than [is the…
Contributor:
Abraham Isaac Kook
Places:
Date:
1920
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
In our national gallery—the gibbore ha-umah—there are three great Moseses: the law-giver of Mt. Sinai, Moses Ben Maimon of Cordova, and Moses Isserles of Cracow. Twice was the winged word coined:…
Contributor:
Leo Jung
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1935
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
…
Contributor:
Elhanan Wasserman
Places:
Date:
1936
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
4. [ . . . ] The Gaon of Vilna writes [in his Even Shelemah] that the second chapter of Vayishla? is the chapter of the “footsteps of the Messiah.” When Jacob returned from his…
Contributor:
Elhanan Wasserman
Places:
Date:
1938
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The fact that at a crossroads in Jewish history two “fathers of the world” met, men who were to become trailblazers in religious philosophy, is of major importance. The…
Contributor:
Abraham Joshua Heschel
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1962
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
It is not the plan of this essay to discuss the millennium-old problem of faith and reason. I want instead to focus attention on a human-life situation in which the man of faith as an individual…
Contributor:
Joseph B. Soloveitchik
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1965
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
I trust that none of my remarks will be understood to say that assimilation is not now, or has not always been, a great threat to the Jewish group. In a sense, the problem of assimilation is as old as…
Contributor:
Gerson D. Cohen
Places:
Brookline, United States of America
Date:
1966
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
It is not unusual for committed Jewish women to be uneasy about their position as Jews. It was to cry down our doubts that rabbis developed their pre-packaged orations on the nobility of motherhood…
Contributor:
Rachel Adler
Places:
Date:
1971
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
What is a Jew? Who is a Jew? After this catastrophe, what is a Jew’s relation to the Jewish past? We resume our original question as we turn from one rupture in post-Holocaust Jewish existence—of the…
Contributor:
Emil L. Fackenheim
Places:
New York City, United States of America
(Toronto, Canada)
Date:
1982