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How the Desire to “Repair the World” Came to Undermine Jewish Particularism https://dev.mosaicmagazine.com/picks/religion-holidays/2018/08/how-the-desire-to-repair-the-world-came-to-undermine-jewish-particularism/

August 10, 2018 | Jonathan Neumann
About the author: Jonathan Neumann, a 2011-2012 Tikvah Fellow, lives in London and writes on politics and religion.

During the second half of the 20th century, the kabbalistic concept of tikkun olam—literally adjusting or “repairing” the world—was transformed in some American Jewish circles into a religious obligation incumbent upon Jews to make the world a better place. This imperative quickly became indistinguishable from the causes of the American left, so that tikkun olam is now synonymous with “social justice.” In his recent book To Heal the World?, Jonathan Neumann argues that this new understanding of tikkun olam has distorted much of American Judaism and undermined the rationale for preserving Judaism and the Jewish people. He discusses the book with Jonathan Silver. (Audio, 31 minutes. Options for download and streaming are available at the link below.)

Read more on Jewish Leadership Conference: https://www.jewishleadershipconference.org/podcast/episode-9-interview-with-to-heal-the-world-author-jonathan-neumann/