The Tikvah Podcast - podcast cover

The Tikvah Podcast

The Tikvah Fund is a philanthropic foundation and ideas institution committed to supporting the intellectual, religious, and political leaders of the Jewish people and the Jewish State. Tikvah runs and invests in a wide range of initiatives in Israel, the United States, and around the world, including educational programs, publications, and fellowships. Our animating mission and guiding spirit is to advance Jewish excellence and Jewish flourishing in the modern age. Tikvah is politically Zionist, economically free-market oriented, culturally traditional, and theologically open-minded. Yet in all issues and subjects, we welcome vigorous debate and big arguments. Our institutes, programs, and publications all reflect this spirit of bringing forward the serious alternatives for what the Jewish future should look like, and bringing Jewish thinking and leaders into conversation with Western political, moral, and economic thought.
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Episodes

Mark Gerson on How the Seder Teaches Freedom Through Food

In almost a week, Jews all over the world will sit down at their seder tables and retell the story of the Exodus, of the Jewish people's national deliverance from Egypt. Of course, in the seder Jews retell that story in a highly choreographed, highly ritualized ceremonial meal. Particular food items are used for particular purposes, and carefully delineated instructions are given for what to do with each. Why do Jews celebrate national deliverance by eating and drinking at all? How does food, of...

Mar 18, 202130 min

Daniel Gordis on the Israeli Supreme Court's New Conversion Ruling

Last week, Israel's Supreme Court announced that, for the purpose of Israeli citizenship, conversions to Judaism that take place under the auspices of the Reform and Conservative movements and within Israel would be recognized by the state. This move ends the Orthodox rabbinate's exclusive jurisdiction over internal conversions as they relate to citizenship, though not to other domains of religious life like marriage and burial. Though the ruling itself doesn't affect many people, it is seen as ...

Mar 11, 202145 min

Gil and Tevi Troy's Non-Negotiable Judaisms

Not long ago, Conservative Judaism was America's largest and most vital Jewish denomination. Today, things are different; for many years now, the movement has been losing and not replacing its members. In a recent essay written to mark and reflect upon one year after the passing of his mother, the historian Gil Troy wrote that "philosophically, history vindicated [my mother's] passionate Zionism but repudiated her pick-and-choose Judaism. My two brothers and I represent a vast historical experim...

Mar 03, 202153 min

Richard Goldberg on How Iran Is Already Testing the Biden Administration

President Biden has been in office for just over one month, but when it comes to his administration's relationship with Iran, the honeymoon is already long over. Just in the past few weeks, Iran has launched rockets at American assets in Iraq, refused to allow in-person inspections by International Atomic Energy Agency officials of its nuclear facilities, and extorted sanctions relief from South Korea by taking an oil tanker hostage. Through all these actions, Tehran is trying to determine the B...

Feb 24, 202145 min

Shany Mor on What Makes America's Peace Processors Tick

The peace process between Israel and the Palestinians has in the last several decades sucked up more American attention, time, and resources than nearly any other conflict in the world. Presidents, cabinet secretaries, national-security officials, and diplomats have poured themselves into solving the problem. These resources have been expended not only because of how Americans perceived the Israeli-Palestinian conflict's strategic importance to the United States, but perhaps more so because it i...

Feb 17, 202129 min

Yehoshua Pfeffer on the Coronavirus and Rethinking the Relationship between Ḥaredim and Israeli Society

In the last week of January 2021, thousands of Israeli Ḥaredim protested and rioted in Bnai Brak, a predominantly ḥaredi city located east of Tel Aviv. The rioters were angry at the government's efforts to enforce a lockdown―not Israel's first―meant to suppress the coronavirus. Several days later, over 10,000 Ḥaredim congregated to mourn the passing of an eminent rabbi, again in violation of the lockdown. For all the frustration that Israel's Ḥaredim feel, their refusal to comply with the lockdo...

Feb 10, 202146 min

Gerald McDermott and Derryck Green on How Biblical Ideas Can Help Bridge America's Racial Divide

Three times a day in prayer and each week on the Sabbath, Jews sustain and renew their special covenant with God. While no other nation has the same covenant as the Jews do, the idea of covenant―that a group of people can band together in obligation under God's sovereignty―has inspired many other nations. From its earliest history, the people of America understood that they relied on divine Providence, and developed a civic culture that made it, as G.K. Chesterton famously put it, "a nation with...

Feb 03, 202149 min

Emmanuel Navon on Jewish Diplomacy from Abraham to Abba Eban

For much of its history, the Jewish people hasn't had a state. The Israel described in the Hebrew Bible had emissaries and military power, and the modern state of Israel has a foreign ministry and an advanced military, yet there's nearly 2,000 years of stateless history in between. Throughout that time, however, Jewish diplomacy has been constant. Even without a state, the Jewish people has integrated, separated, argued, and made amends with the other nations of the world. And, as a new book sho...

Jan 27, 202143 min

Michael Oren on Writing Fiction and Serving Israel

Very few contemporary public figures have had as many successes in as many fields as Michael Oren. A writer-statesman in the model of Thucydides, Oren was Israel's ambassador to the United States during the Obama years, and was before that a historian of the Jewish state, the author of perhaps the best single book on the Six-Day War. He's also worked in think tanks, been a professor at Ivy League institutions, and served as an MK in the Israeli parliament. Now, with the recent publication of The...

Jan 21, 202133 min

Podcast: Joel Kotkin Thinks About God and the Pandemic

Most of our podcast guests, especially those focusing on religious issues, tend to look at the world in a traditional way―meaning, their habits of mind tend to be traditional and conservative. Many of our podcast guests, especially the rabbis and religious leaders who help us think about Jewish theology, tend to look at the world and speak out of the more conservative and orthodox orientation. But this week's guest is—at least professionally—an outsider to that world. Joel Kotkin is not a rabbi ...

Jan 13, 202135 min

Dore Gold on the Strategic Importance of the Nile River and the Politics of the Red Sea

In the water-scarce Middle East, water that can be used for drinking and agriculture is of premium importance. The entire ancient civilization of imperial Egypt grew up around the Nile River and its basin, and much of the east Africa still depends on it. Although Israel has made amazing advances in hydrotechnology, it too must treat water as a scarce resource, and that makes the politics of the Nile, along with the policing of the Red Sea, a question of real strategic significance to the Jewish ...

Jan 07, 202117 min

Yuval Levin Asks How Religious Minorities Survive in America—Then and Now

American democracy is a nation of nations. Muslims, Christians, and Jews, women and men from every nation on earth have made themselves into Americans. Nevertheless, a unique majority culture developed within this nation of nations: a kind of big-tent, denomination-less, Protestant Christianity. In that culture, the dominant Jewish anxiety was assimilation into Christianity. Today however, America's widely shared cultural pieties are no longer overtly Christian. There remain pockets of Christian...

Dec 30, 202025 min

Mark Gottlieb on Rabbi Soloveitchik's "Everlasting Hanukkah"

When the Jewish people celebrate Hanukkah each winter, what are we celebrating? The story of the holiday is the tale of rededicating the Temple in Jerusalem after it had been occupied and defiled by the Seleucid Greeks, who—with the aid of Hellenizing Jews—were not content only to have conquered the land, but also demanded that the Jews living there relinquish their religious way of life. And with that tradition so close to being snuffed out, monotheism itself was nearly snuffed out. The stakes ...

Dec 17, 202035 min

Ambassador Ron Dermer Looks Back on His Years in Washington

From the Iran Deal to the rise of and fall of ISIS, from Israel's year of inconclusive elections to a pandemic that has ravaged globe, the second decade of the 21st century has been history-making for both the United States and Israel. And for the better part of these last 10 years, Ron Dermer has served as the Jewish state's ambassador in Washington, D.C. He is not the first native-born American who emigrated to Israel, rose to political prominence, and was then sent back here on behalf of his ...

Dec 10, 202042 min

Richard Goldberg on the Future of Israeli-Saudi Relations

It has been widely reported that, in late November of 2020, the Israeli prime minister secretly flew to Saudi Arabia for a meeting with the kingdom's crown prince. That these two leaders met at all is noteworthy; that they might have discussed the possibility of normalizing relations between the Jewish state and the wealthiest and most influential Arab country is momentous. It is easy to see what Israel stands to gain from peace with the Saudis. But what's in it for Saudi Arabia? What would they...

Dec 03, 202054 min

Matti Friedman on the Russian Aliyah—30 Years Later

After a decades-long, worldwide campaign to free Soviet Jewry, in the late 1980s the borders of the Soviet Union were finally opened, allowing its Jews to immigrate to the State of Israel. This period saw approximately one million men and women from the former Soviet Union leave and resettle in the Jewish state. They came in fulfillment of Zionist aspirations, in search of material opportunities, and in pursuit of greater freedom. At the time that the Russians arrived, Israel had fewer than five...

Nov 19, 202041 min

Daniel Gordis on America, Israel, and the Sources of Jewish Resilience

The year 2020 has been one of real suffering. The Coronavirus has infected tens of millions the world over and has taken the lives of a quarter of a million Americans. It's decimated the economy, shuttered businesses, brought low great cities, and immiserated millions who could not even attend funerals or weddings, visit the sick, or console the demoralized. This podcast focuses on how to think Jewishly about suffering and about the sources of Jewish fortitude in the face of tragedy and challeng...

Nov 12, 202040 min

John Podhoretz on 75 Years of Commentary

In November of 1945, the American Jewish Committee established a new, independent magazine of Jewish ideas, with the goal of explaining America to the Jews and the Jews to America. This month, Commentary marks 75 years of publishing about everything from culture, politics, and history to foreign affairs, Israel, and Jewish thought. During that time, it has proven to be one of America's most influential journals of public affairs and central fora for great Jewish debates. The late Irving Kristol ...

Oct 29, 202053 min

Yossi Klein Halevi on Jabotinsky's Security Strategy (Rebroadcast)

Last week marked the 140th birthday of one of Zionism's most remarkable and prophetic leaders: Vladimir Ze'ev Jabotinsky. The intellectual father of the Revisionist school and the ideological forerunner of today's ruling Likud party, Jabotinsky exhibited more foresight during his lifetime that nearly any of his contemporaries. He was, for example, foremost in sounding the alarm about the danger to European Jews a decade before the Holocaust. His prescience is also on display in a pair of essays ...

Oct 21, 202049 min

Michael McConnell on the Free Exercise of Religion

Under the U.S. Constitution, the freedom of religion is protected by two separate guarantees: a prohibition on the establishment of an official church and an individual right to the "free exercise" of religion. The First Amendment thus protects not only the right of the faithful to believe as their consciences dictate, but also the right to live their lives in accordance with these beliefs. Since 1990, the legal contours of the free exercise clause have been defined by a landmark Supreme Court c...

Oct 14, 202032 min

Ruth Wisse on Five Books Every Jew Should Read

During this year of lockdowns, shuttered businesses, and working from home, people have made time for many new habits and hobbies, from baking bread to reorganizing closets. In this podcast, Jewish literary and political scholar Ruth Wisse, one of our era's great masters of Jewish letters, offers her own suggestion for how to spend at least some of that time: reading the greatest works of modern Jewish literature. Those works to her are: Daniel Deronda by George Eliot (Sign up for Professor Wiss...

Oct 08, 202042 min

Dan Senor on the Start-Up Nation and COVID-19

The Coronavirus pandemic has undermined years of economic growth and sent hundreds of thousands of Israelis onto the unemployment rolls. How can Israel—the legendary "start-up nation"—recover from this economic crisis? Dan Senor, co-author with Saul Singer of the bestselling book Start-Up Nation: The Story of Israel's Economic Miracle , is one of the world's leading experts on Israel's economy in general, and its tech sector in particular. He joins Mosaic 's editor, Jonathan Silver, for a discus...

Oct 01, 202039 min

Reflections for the Days of Awe

2020 has been a chaotic year, and last weekend, millions of Jews the world over celebrated Rosh Hashanah—the Jewish New Year—and prayed that the coming year would be better than the one that just ended. Of course, for religious Jews we're now in the midst of the ten day period between Rosh Hashana and the day of atonement, Yom Kippur. During this interim period, known as the Ten Days of Repentance, we take a step back from our lives, reflect on our shortcomings, and resolve to return to walk a b...

Sep 25, 202036 min

Haviv Rettig Gur on Israel's Deep State

Over the past several years, debates about America's so-called "deep state"—the web of agencies, career civil servants, and unelected bureaucrats responsible for a growing amount of federal policymaking—have increasingly found their way into political discourse in the United States. Though these arguments occasionally take conspiratorial turns, at their core is perhaps the most important question in political science: Who rules, the people or the bureaucrats? In Mosaic 's September 2020 essay , ...

Sep 17, 202052 min

Ruth Wisse and Hillel Halkin on the Authors Who Created Modern Hebrew Literature

Since 2015, the Israeli writer and translator Hillel Halkin has published a series of ten essays in Mosaic on the seminal Hebrew writers of the 19th and early-20th centuries. They dealt with everyone from Bialik to Agnon, Rahel to Ahad Ha'am. Those essays have now been brought together in Halkin's newly published book, The Lady of Hebrew and Her Lovers of Zion . The act of writing such a book is an act of cultural preservation, safeguarding the literature, poetry, and essays through which the Je...

Sep 09, 202048 min

Gil Troy on "Never Alone"

Prisoner of Zion, human-rights activist, member of Knesset, chairman of the Jewish Agency. Lecturer, author, inspiration to millions. In his 72 years on earth, Natan Sharansky has lived several lifetimes. And in his latest book, Never Alone: Prison, Politics, and My People , he partners with the historian Gil Troy to reflect on the lessons he has learned throughout a life that's taken him from the Gulag to the halls of Israel's parliament. In this podcast, Gil Troy joins Jonathan Silver for a co...

Sep 03, 202043 min

Jared Kushner on His Approach to Middle East Diplomacy

Though substantial progress is rarely made, peace in the Middle East is the holy grail of every American presidential administration and the subject of endless analysis and discussion. The amount of time and effort that government officials, foreign-policy experts, and diplomats have put into solving the conflict between Israel and her Arab neighbors is probably incalculable. But this month, the United States managed to help them achieve a breakthrough, brokering what's being called the Abraham ...

Aug 26, 202031 min

Ambassador Ron Dermer on the Israel-U.A.E. Accord

One week ago, the president of the United States, the prime minister of Israel, and the crown prince of the United Arab Emirates together announced the normalization of relations between the U.A.E and Israel. This is Israel's first accord with an Arab nation since 1994, and it is the first time it has ever entered into such an arrangement with an Arab nation with which it does not share a border. In this week's podcast, the Israeli ambassador to the United States, Ron Dermer, explains how this h...

Aug 20, 202033 min

Micah Goodman on Politics, Power, and Kingship in Deuteronomy

The book of Deuteronomy, which Jews around the globe read in synagogue in the period leading up to the High Holy Days, consists primarily of Moses's final oration to the people of Israel. With the nation on the cusp of conquering Canaan and establishing its own sovereign government, the prophet presents Israel with a set of laws and regulations surrounding power and kingship—what some scholars call the "Mosaic Constitution." In his best-selling Hebrew book, ha-N'um ha-Aharon shel Moshe ( Moses's...

Aug 13, 202034 min

Michael Doran on China's Drive for Middle Eastern Supremacy

Last year, a former Obama-era Defense Department official testified before Congress about Chinese strategy in the Middle East, saying "China's strategy in the Middle East is driven by its economic interests...China...does not appear interested in substantially deepening its diplomatic or security activities there." This view certainly sums up conventional foreign-policy wisdom, but, write the Hudson Institute scholars Michael Doran and Peter Rough, it couldn't be more wrong. In an extended essay...

Aug 06, 202046 min
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