Lessons for the U.S. from Israel’s 2007 Bombing of the Syrian Nuclear Reactor
An inside view from Washington.
March 23, 2018
The ultra-Orthodox/Modern Orthodox schism.
Today, Orthodox Jewry is divided, if not always cleanly, between the Modern Orthodox, who embrace secular education and some openness to the non-Jewish world, and the ultra-Orthodox, who pursue greater cultural isolation and a more stringent understanding of religious requirements. Moshe Koppel notes that these categories did not apply to the many Jews he knew in his youth who had come to the U.S. from Eastern Europe after World War II. He seeks to explain how the schism came about:
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The case for limited goals.
The Syrian Humpty Dumpty can’t be put back together.
Can Yiddish literature be delightful?
The ultra-Orthodox/Modern Orthodox schism.