Articles

Browse our library of articles and essays dating back to the 1990s by topic and author.

Featured Articles

by Rabbi Andrue J. (Andy) Kahn

  • News

A Slow-Moving Coup: Zionism's authoritarian takeover of Reform Judaism

The 2026 Recharging Reform Judaism conference adopted a resolution to bar anti-Zionists from ordination at Hebrew Union College, positing Zionism as a defining criterion of Jewish authenticity. This proposal has a long historical context, through which the alignment of Reform Judaism with Zionism was less a democratic development than a forcibly instituted one, advanced over several decades by committees appointed from above and votes taken under limited deliberation. The anti-nationalist position now being derided was a cornerstone of many of the movement's own founders. We must recover an older strand of Reform thought, grounded in a universal ethics of solidarity and the mission to rebuild the world on foundations of social justice.

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by Rabbi Andrue J. (Andy) Kahn

Vayeitzei: The Fear That Won’t Look Away

Jacob’s story shows that deception ends only when he allows himself to feel the full weight of pachad, the fear that brings truth into view. This week's Torah portion calls us to adopt that same moral discipline in a time when misinformation and state violence rely on our willingness to look away.

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by Rabbi Andrue J. (Andy) Kahn

  • News

Jews differ on both Zionism and Mamdani

This essay argues that American Jews face a defining choice between a Judaism bound to nationalism and one rooted in ethical universalism and democratic freedom. Reclaiming Judaism’s tradition of debate and conscience, it calls for building diverse, democratic Jewish futures grounded in human dignity and collective liberation.

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by Rabbi Andrue J. (Andy) Kahn

  • History Series

What is “The Jewish People?”

Today, it is our duty to reach back to the sources of our traditions to seek out who they were built for—a search for who we are today in line with the question of 'who have we been'?

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by Allan C. Brownfeld

  • Special Interest Report

American Jewish Groups Show Division Over Israel’s Role in Gaza

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  • Issues

For Whom Does The "Jewish Establishment" Really Speak?

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All Articles

by Rabbi Lizz Goldstein

  • D'var Torah

Korach: "People-oriented" Powerplay

“You have gone too far! For all the community is holy and God is in their midst. Why then do you lift yourselves above God’s congregation?”

How can we trust leaders who use people-oriented language to take on personal gain? Parshat Korach is often viewed as a righteous rebellion against authority, but in this D'var Rabbi Lizz Goldstein offers a critique of Korach's self-gratifying action. 

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by Rabbi Andrue J. (Andy) Kahn

  • D'var Torah

Shlach: Reacting and Remembering

"That shall be your fringe; look at it and remember all God’s commandments and do them, so that you do not follow your heart and eyes in your urge to stray." Numbers 15:39. 

Parshat Shalach is well known for its depiction of the 12 scouts who survey Canaan before the Israelites enter the land, yet the outcome of this parashah is less so. Shalach introduces the mitzvah of tzitzit, the ritual fringes that adorn the corners of Jewish garments. Tzitzit provide a physical reminder of God's presence, becoming like a rope to grasp onto amidst overwhelming river currents (Bamidbar Rabbah 17:6).

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by Rabbi Ilana Sumka

  • D'var Torah

Be’ha’alotecha 2026: Are We the Prophets Now?

"Would that all God's people were prophets!" When Joshua asks Moses to restrain Eldad and Medad, two Israelites who received the divine spirit without authorization, Moses refuses to be jealous and wishes instead that everyone could prophesy. The prophets stood at the meeting of the sacred and the just, and prophecy did not end with the Biblical canon. Maimonides shows that it is a spiritual practice, one that rests on hearts immersed in joy and remains open to all. The call of this moment is to emulate Eldad and Medad, to embody love and immerse ourselves in practice, so that each of us can channel the prophetic voice our times so urgently need.

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by Rabbi Andrue J. (Andy) Kahn

  • Perspective

Toldot: Choosing Which Israel We Become

Sarah Hurwitz’s remarks at the Jewish Federations’ General Assembly frame antisemitism as an exceptional, ever-present hatred and describe criticism of Israel’s actions in Gaza as a misunderstanding born of Holocaust education, which obscures the real violence Palestinians are facing. The Torah story of Jacob and Esau, and its various interpretations, show how rabbinic and Zionist interpretations turned Esau into the archetypal non-Jew, seeing their conflict as a pre-figuration of hatred of Jews as an unchangeable law that binds the Jewish nation together. Returning to the plain meaning of the story allows for a reinvestigation of the themes to move us beyond this misformulation of antisemitism.

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by Qian Julie Wang

  • Perspective

Rosh haShanah Sermon 5786: The Little Guys

Qian Julie Wang reflects on how both American culture and American Judaism often define identity through victimhood, turning suffering into a kind of currency that fuels competition and vengeance rather than justice or healing. Drawing on the Binding of Isaac, she contrasts readings of Isaac as helpless victim or empowered adult to show that we can choose to live from agency instead of powerlessness. In this season of teshuvah, she calls us to reclaim power and privilege not as tainted words but as sacred responsibilities, reminding us that each of us is both David and Goliath, oppressed and oppressor. Our task is to embrace the perspective that empowers us to care for one another and to build a world where suffering is not the measure of worth.

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by Peter Brownfeld

  • Special Interest Report

Remembering Allan Brownfeld

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