European capitals, from Paris to Budapest, are enjoying a Jewish cultural renaissance. At the same time, the threats to Jewish life across Europe are growing apace.
Under the pressure of Muslim immigration, one might have expected a re-assertion of the historic link between Christian churches and individual European states; far from it.
When religious Jews “go off the derekh”—abandon the practice of Judaism—it is not necessarily because they have found something better.
Uniting religious and secular Israelis in study, Ein Prat aims to create a national movement of young people who are fervently Jewish without necessarily being ritually observant.
More and more Americans think religion is a force for good—but increasingly they also want nothing to do with it. These two facts are. . .