Rivka Ravitz may be a long-time Haredi political thinker, but that doesn’t mean she thinks politics is always the answer.
Transcripts are typically available the week a podcast is released.
We talk to Alana Newhouse about why seemingly everyone is arguing about Israel.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to Aliza and Ephraim Bulow, a married couple whose religious paths diverged over the course of their shared life.
Rabbi Simon Jacobson joins us to discuss Jewish mysticism and redemption.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we sit down with Rabbi Jeremy Wieder – rosh yeshiva, PhD, Bible professor, and passionate Orthodox moral voice – to discuss what the Torah has to say about social justice.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to Rabbi Menachem Penner—dean of RIETS at Yeshiva University—and his son Gedalia—a musician, cantor-in-training, and member of the LGBTQ community—about their experience in reconciling their family’s religious tradition with Gedalia’s sexual orientation.
We talk to Michael Olshin about the purpose of the gap year in Israel.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we sit down for a special podcast with our host, David Bashevkin, to discuss the podcast’s namesake, the year 1840.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to Rabbi Pini Dunner and Rav Moshe Weinberger about the Yabloner Rebbe and his astounding story of teshuva.
In this episode, we talk to a father and daughter who were estranged and then reunited.
We talk to Rabbi Shaanan Gelman and his son Ziggy about the persistence of a parent-child relationship when the latter faces addiction.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to Yoni Rosensweig, rabbi of the Netzah Menashe community in Beit Shemesh, about the intersection between mental health and halacha.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we sit down with Rav Moshe Weinberger, rabbi and educator, to discuss the role of mysticism in modern-day Judaism.
The true enemy in Israel’s current war, Einat Wilf says, is what she calls “Palestinianism.”
How can our generation understanding mysticism, philosophy, and suffering in today’s chaotic world?
We talk to Adam Ferziger about how American Jews have helped shape the evolution of Israeli Judaism.
We talk to Michael Eisenberg about the state of the Jewish People in Israel and the diaspora.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we sit down with Joey Rosenfeld, social worker and kabbalist, to talk about the differences between mysticism and rationalism and the roles they should play in our lives.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to Rabbi Josh Grajower – rabbi and educator – about the loss of his wife, as well as the loss that Tisha B’Av represents for the Jewish People.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we discuss parental alienation.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to Emmi Polansky, known on social media as @livingemunah, about her journey finding agency as a single mother.
We speak with Rabbi Aaron Kotler about the beginnings of the American yeshiva world.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we sit down with Dr. Ora Wiskind, professor and author, to discuss her life journey, both as a Jew and as an academic, and her attitude towards mysticism.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we sit down with Laura E. Adkins, the JTA’s opinion editor and an adjunct professor of journalism at Stern College for Women, to talk about how she stays grounded while engaging with so many disparate viewpoints.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we talk to a Haredi mother named Dina about her two children who serve in the IDF, one of whom was critically wounded in the current war.
Perhaps the most fundamental question any religious believer can ask is: “Does God exist?” It’s time we find good answers.
On slowing down, paying attention, and what to read while the world wakes up
At the conclusion of Vayikra, the Torah asks us to imagine a life built on rest, responsibility, and a covenant that will…
This Sukkot, I am reminded that bringing new life into a hostile world is not naïveté—it’s resistance.
Children don’t come with guarantees. Washing machines come with guarantees.
Joy and meaning can be found not only despite the brokenness, but even because of the brokenness.
My family made aliyah over a decade ago. Navigating our lives as American immigrants in Israel is a day-to-day balance.
From verses in Parshat Bo to desert caves, tefillin emerge as one of Judaism’s earliest embodied practices.
I have lived with hearing loss for decades. This is what it’s taught me about community, human ability, and the art of…
Children cannot truly avoid the consequences of estrangement. Their parents’ shadow will always follow.
Rav Froman was a complicated character in Israel and in his own home city of Tekoa, as people from both the right…
Christianity’s focus on the afterlife historically discouraged Jews from discussing it—but Jews very much believe in it.
Mysticism attempts to provide a new approach to view a torn and twisted world, enlightening it for those who follow it.
To talk about the history of Jewish mysticism is in many ways to talk about the history of the mystical community.
This Yom Kippur, we look into the life of Rabbi Hillel Zeitlin to learn about religious change and devotion over time.
I consider the Rebbe to be my personal teacher, and I find this teaching particularly relevant for us now.
Kosher phones make calls and send texts. No Instagram, no TikTok, and no distractions. Maybe it’s time the world embraces them.
Wills at the end of one’s life are often personal, intimate and valuable. What can we glean from those which we can…
A Hezbollah missile killed Rabbi Dr. Tamir Granot’s son, Amitai Tzvi, on Oct. 15. Here, he pleas for Haredim to enlist into…
If You’re Reading These Words is a book in which all the heroes have died, yet it overflows with life.
A 94-year-old Holocaust survivor, a lone soldier, and more. Here are seven olim sharing their stories of aliyah.
Yes, the Israeli army needs Jews to draft, but more than that, Jews need to experience what it means to serve.
Between early prayer books, kabbalistic additions, and the printing press, the siddur we have today is filled with prayers from across history.
What is the Zohar — and why has it captivated mystics, scholars, and seekers for nearly a thousand years?
Rabbanit Sarah Yehudit Schneider believes meditation is the entryway to understanding mysticism.
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, David Bashevkin answers questions from Diana Fersko, senior rabbi of the Village Temple Reform synagogue,…
We speak with Joey Rosenfeld about how our generation can understand suffering.
We speak with Naftuli Moster about how and why he changed his understanding of the values imparted by Judaism.
Why did this Hasidic Rebbe move from Poland to Israel, only to change his name, leave religion, and disappear to Los Angeles?
Rabbi Moshe Gersht first encountered the world of Chassidus at the age of twenty, the beginning of what he terms his “spiritual…
In this episode of the 18Forty Podcast, we speak with Mark Wildes, founder and director of Manhattan Jewish Experience, about Modern Orthodox…
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