Making the Most of Israel’s Renewed Relations with Morocco
The monarch sees himself as the protector of pluralism, and of Palestinians.
December 28, 2022
“If we had no sense of disgust, . . . we would also have no sense of the sacred.”
To some, the dietary regulations of Leviticus and Deuteronomy are exemplars of what rabbinic tradition calls a ḥok (literally, a statute)—a Divine decree whose rationale is unintelligible to mankind, and known only to God himself. Natan Slifkin argues that, on the contrary, these dietary laws have ethical meaning, if one understands ethics not “in the narrow Western sense of not causing harm to other people,” but in a more expansive Judaic sense:
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Login or SubscribeThe monarch sees himself as the protector of pluralism, and of Palestinians.
Making sense of the override clause.
A bad year for al-Qaeda, but a better one for Islamic State.
“If we had no sense of disgust, . . . we would also have no sense of the sacred.”
Plundered and recycled.