All in Descriptions

Isolation

One of the most eminent modern Jewish historians, Michael Meyer, Ph.D., reflects here on one of the key themes of the COVID-19 pandemic: isolation, offering a number of historical insights and parallels. Seen in this context, we may feel less alone in our isolation.

What the World of the Cairo Geniza Can Teach Us About Responding to COVID-19

Documents found in the Cairo Genizah provide powerful lessons about the importance of community, charity and compassion during earlier periods of Jewish experience. Historian Jennifer Grayson, Ph.D. investigates this treasure trove of Jewish life and practice. As a range of fascinating letters, records and receipts from the past show, Jewish communities have a long history of responding to communal and personal crises.

On Reading Childhood Death in the Biblical Text

Jewish tradition offers a way of facing up to the scandal of human frailty and morality. COVID-19 has brought this reality into stark relief in recent months, and so the consciousness that there is no novelty in tragedy may provide a degree of comfort and perspective, even in trying times. Scholar of the Ancient Near East Kristine Henriksen Garroway, Ph.D. offers a way to reach across the centuries and find the most acute, the most contemporary human reality.

Isaac Mayer Wise’s Op-Eds on the Yellow Fever Epidemics of the 1870s

In a fascinating history of the response by Isaac Mayer Wise to a tragic series of Yellow Fever outbreaks in the 19th century, this article shows us how deeply and generously American Jews extended their care to those who became ill and were affected by earlier pandemics in American history. Tracing individual and communal responses to regional and national healthy crises, Rabbi Gary P. Zola, Ph.D., shows just how much we have inherited from the founder of institutional Reform Judaism in the U. S.