SAPIR’s latest issue, the second on the theme of Aspiration, launches today with new and returning voices including Dara Horn, Joshua Foer, Eve Barlow, and Jeremy Dauber. Read it now!https://t.co/8T3LwSCxRd
In the latest SAPIR Conversation, @mijalbitton sits down with @RabbiWolpe to discuss her recent essay “The Future is Sephardic.” Listen now!https://t.co/pzjRA3UnmE
In the latest SAPIR Conversation, journalist @Eve_Barlow joined Bret Stephens to discuss her recent SAPIR essay "Queers for Zion." Stream it on Spotify or Apple Podcasts: https://t.co/383bK9zljR
📢 Bret Stephens is one of the most important journalists alive today so it was my absolute honor to join him in a conversation now available on Spotify about my original work “Queers for Zion” - an essay published in @sapirjournal this quarter - offering original solutions to redirecting the LGBTQ+ world back towards its original rights advocacy and away from suicidal ideological capture. The full episode is at the link https://t.co/IikYBF0u13. A video recording of our conversation will soon be available too. 🏳️🌈🦄✡️
A fascinating discussion with orthodox Rabbi and Egyptologist Joshua Berman about the exodus, the historicity of Torah and the meaning of Pesach- hope you will listen. https://t.co/nh5IIqjNx3
"Cash the damn check."
Those were the words of Bret Stephens, @nytimes Opinion columnist and Editor-In-Chief of @SapirJournal. With uncertainty for Jews at home and abroad, Bret urges listeners to invest in the next generation.
📷: https://t.co/Mzz9RerZrN
Tomorrow at 12:00 PM ET, join @Eve_Barlow alongside Bret Stephens for a conversation on her recent essay "Queers for Zion." Register now.https://t.co/v2Ix3Lr7vN
Tomorrow I'm so excited to be speaking with the brilliant Bret Stephens on this topic for @SapirJournal following the publication of my essay earlier this month. If you'd like to attend please register: https://t.co/O5XZ7OLxmN
In the latest SAPIR Conversation, @YonatanAdiri joined Bret Stephens to discuss his recent SAPIR essay on “The Silicon Dome.” Watch it now. https://t.co/VvJ11za0fF
Jeremy Dauber, Atran Professor of Yiddish Literature at Columbia, carefully revisits Isaac Asimov’s sci-fi classic and limns its hidden Jewish influences, both biblical and modern.https://t.co/0oM8nPeeIE
Israel's best doctors, engineers, and researchers are leaving in record numbers, driven by soaring housing costs, political instability, and the exhaustion of prolonged war. Former Israeli Finance Ministry offical Yarom Ariav suggests a few remedies.https://t.co/Ctu8N2Dh26
Tracing antizionism's ideological genealogy from Soviet propaganda to Patrick Wolfe's settler-colonial framework, @adam_louis52328 argues that it is a modern pseudoscience as corrosive to the academy as race science once was.https://t.co/nr3vx8eiIG
Has the Ashkenazi dream of social acceptance and integration in America curdled? “If the past American Jewish century was Ashkenazi, the next must be Sephardic,” contends @mijalbitton.https://t.co/0y1M0q9vdi
In an inaugural address to Stanford's new Israel studies program, Bret Stephens dismantles the “not even wrong” claims that dominate campus discourse on Israel and makes the case for rigorous, honest scholarship as the antidote.https://t.co/huz0jIe9Sy
Tomorrow at 12 PM ET, join @YonatanAdiri and Bret Stephens on Zoom for conversation about Adiri's recent SAPIR article, "The Silicon Dome." Register now.https://t.co/WXqnGnHxHw
Shuki Taylor warns that Judaism has become too convenient, replacing embodied practice with passive consumption. Convinced that “the tradition belongs most fully to those who take part in making it into being,” his remedy is to get our hands dirty again.https://t.co/5IyQdJeUuT
With rising graduate unemployment, public-sector layoffs, and renewed interest in Jewish institutions, 2026 offers the Jewish communal world a perfect-storm recruiting opportunity. Longtime HR professional Rachel Kay outlines her plan to capitalize on it.https://t.co/YMCRkD93c7