Embark on a journey of Jewish learning and discovery, exploring the depth of our Interdenominational Relations resources, where tagged items including audio, programs, and podcast episodes await your exploration.
e-TiM: Adversaries in Jewish Tradition: Megillas Antiochus, Toldos Yeshu and More
Rabbi Dr. Shlomo Zuckier
Thursdays December 15, 22, 29
1:30pm Eastern, 8:30 pm Israel
Please join us for this three-part series where we will explore classical Jewish…
A Middle Ground Between Orthodoxy and Reform: Rabbi Zechariah Frankel and the Positive-Historical School
Dr. Marc Shapiro
Mondays,October 31, 2022 - January 30, 2023
8:30 pm Eastern
After examining the first two generations of Reform and the…
This three-part series will take place on Thursdays at 10:30am Eastern (5:30pm in Israel) from June 9 to June 23.
Most people who have heard of Karaism know very little about it and what they know is often incorrect. Although the name Karaism is…
This series takes place on Mondays at 8:30pm Eastern.
In part two of this ongoing series we continue our examination of the early reformers. In the second generation of Reform, halakhic justifications are not central, while the dividing lines…
Monday, October 19
Pre-Enlightenment Sephardi approaches to Hashkafa and Halakha
Monday, October 26
Post-Enlightenment Sephardi approaches to Hashkafa and Halakha
Monday, November 2
The Future of Sephardi Judaism - Western Sephardim As A Model
From the 15th Annual Renewing Our Spirit Conference. This annual gathering features fascinating lectures and hard-hitting, provocative panel discussions with some of the finest scholars in the Jewish world today.
Dr. Elliott Malamet, Dr. Marshall Korenblum, Rabbi Chaim Rapoport and 3 more
In 1861 Rav Yaakov Ettlinger penned what is likely the most revolutionary responsa of modern times; one that allowed, for the first time in Jewish history, those who publicly desecrated the Shabbat to remain part of the observant Jewish community.…
Dr. Ruby Wolbromsky, Leah Malamet, Rabbi Jeremy Stavisky and 1 more
Recent studies have indicated that a significant number of children raised in dati homes eventually leave the path of religious observance. Some estimates range from fifteen to twenty percent per year of the students in the religious high…