Épisodes

  • Charlie Kirk and American Innocence
    Sep 18 2025

    Charlie Kirk, influential right-wing commentator and founder of Turning Point USA, was assassinated on September 10th. Since then, he has been made into a martyr on the right, and the Trump administration has vowed to crack down on the left, despite details about the shooter’s motivation remaining hazy. Among liberals, there has been a baffling rush to hold Kirk up as a paragon of democracy—despite his participation in the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election—and to demonstrate their own grief at his death. In this episode, editor-in-chief Arielle Angel, contributing editor David Klion, assistant editor Maya Rosen, and contributor Ben Lorber, a researcher of antisemitism and white nationalism, discuss reactions to Kirk’s assassination across the political landscape, the mostly imagined specter of left violence versus the reality, the meaning of Kirk’s deification in Israel, and the ways reactions to his death have become a proxy for conversations about the genocide in Gaza.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Articles Mentioned and Further Reading

    “Charlie Kirk Was Practicing Politics the Right Way,” Ezra Klein, The New York Times

    “How to mourn in our polarized age,” Rachel Cohen Booth, Vox

    “Charlie Kirk’s Murder Is a Tragedy and a Disaster,” Ben Burgis and Meagan Day, Jacobin

    “JD Vance threatens crackdown on ‘far-left’ groups after Charlie Kirk shooting,” Rachel Leingang, The Guardian

    Sarah Schulman on the sublimation of the Palestinian genocide into mourning for Charlie Kirk on X

    “Light Among the Nations,” Suzanne Schneider, Jewish Currents

    “The Group Forging a ‘Judeo-Christian’ Zionism for the New MAGA Age,” Ben Lorber, Jewish Currents

    “A Jewish clothing brand is making Charlie Kirk yarmulkes,” PJ Grisar, The Forward

    “In Israel, public tributes to Charlie Kirk include a street naming, a mural and a missile in Gaza,” Grace Gilson, JTA

    “The Measure of the World,” Claire Schwartz, Jewish Currents

    “Since the Hamas attack, Israelis have begun arming themselves the American way,” Jonathan M. Metzel, The Los Angeles Times


    Transcript forthcoming.

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    38 min
  • What a Lifetime of Struggle Taught Angela Davis
    Sep 11 2025

    In this episode, Jewish Currents editor-at-large Peter Beinart interviews the philosopher, activist, author, and educator Angela Davis, whose writing and organizing have shaped Black liberation, feminist, queer, and prison abolitionist movements for more than 50 years. In a wide-ranging conversation, the two discuss how Jews shaped Davis’s formative years, analyze the Jewish role in the civil rights movement, compare the campus activism of the 1960s to today’s college protests, and explore why Palestine is central to the global left.

    This conversation first appeared in The Beinart Notebook on Substack.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Media Mentioned and Further Reading

    Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement, Angela Davis

    Angela Davis: An Autobiography, Angela Davis

    “How the 1960s Civil Rights and Black Power Movements Split on Israel,” Michael R. Fishbach, Mondoweiss

    The Wretched of the Earth, Frantz Fanon

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    41 min
  • Mailbag #2
    Sep 4 2025

    In this episode, Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel, editor-at-large Peter Beinart, associate editor Mari Cohen, and senior editor Nathan Goldman answer reader questions. They discuss the challenge of sustaining Jewish social reproduction outside of Zionism; the attachment to putting out a print magazine; the difficulties of comparing genocides; the discomforts of subscribing to the free Jewish children’s book service PJ Library; and the perils of regarding Zionism as a singular, unparalleled evil.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Media Mentioned and Further Reading

    “Reclaiming a Minor Literature,” Maya Rosen, Jewish Currents

    “We Need New Jewish Institutions,” Arielle Angel, Jewish Currents

    “What We Talk About When We Talk About ‘Intermarriage,’” Jewish Currents staff roundtable, Jewish Currents

    The Necessity of Exile: Essays from a Distance by Shaul Magid

    The No-State Solution: A Jewish Manifesto by Daniel Boyarin

    “Against Analogy,” Ben Ratskoff, Jewish Currents

    “The Law Cannot Let Itself See the Nakba,” Joshua Abramson Cohen’s interview with Rabea Eghbariah, Jewish Currents

    “Living with the Holocaust: The Journey of a Child of Holocaust Survivors,” Sara Roy, Institute for Palestine Studies

    “Can Genocide Studies Survive a Genocide in Gaza?”, Mari Cohen, Jewish Currents

    Sammy Spider’s First Yom Kippur by Sylvia Rouss

    “Tell PJ Library: Zionism is Not Judaism!” petition

    “Rhetoric Without Reckoning,” Simone Zimmerman, Jewish Currents

    “History Lesson,” Laleh Khalili, Jewish Currents

    “A Logic of Elimination,” Abe Silberstein’s interview with Lorenzo Veracini on settler colonialism, Jewish Currents

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    50 min
  • Familiar Touch and the Feminist Politics of Aging
    Aug 21 2025

    In this episode, editor-in-chief Arielle Angel speaks with filmmaker Sarah Friedland and feminist scholar and activist Lynne Segal about aging through a feminist lens, on the occasion of the digital release of Friedland’s award-winning film Familiar Touch. The film follows cookbook author Ruth Goldman (Kathleen Chalfant) as she transitions to a memory care unit in an assisted living facility and struggles with a shifting sense of self and a different relationship to dependence and care.

    Friedland was inspired to tell this story by watching the fiercely independent women in her grandmother’s Jewish Communist milieu as they aged, as well as by Segal’s book Out of Time: The Pleasures and Perils of Ageing—particularly its description of how aging renders the elder at once “all ages and no age,” and capable of experiencing time in less linear ways. Angel, Friedland, and Segal discuss what it would mean to embrace, rather than fear, the experience of aging; to center a politics of care and interdependence over a neoliberal idea of self-sufficiency; and to allow for elder desire.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Media Mentioned and Further Reading

    Out of Time: The Pleasures and Perils of Ageing by Lynne Segal

    Lean on Me: A Politics of Radical Care by Lynne Segal

    The Care Manifesto: The Politics of Interdependence by The Care Collective

    “How the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' Impacts Older Adults,” AARP

    The Moosewood Cookbook by Mollie Katzen

    Sarah Friedland’s speech about Gaza at the Venice Film Festival

    “Why We, 18 Elder Jewish Women, Chained Ourselves to the White House,” Jewish Voice for Peace

    “Exodus From Now,” Arielle Angel, Jewish Currents


    Transcript forthcoming.

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    46 min
  • Ms. Rachel Stands Up for the Littles of Gaza
    Aug 14 2025

    In this episode, editor-at-large Peter Beinart speaks to children’s television star Rachel Griffin Accurso, better known to her fans as Ms. Rachel, about her advocacy for Palestinian children in Gaza, tens of thousands of whom have been maimed or killed by Israel over the last 22 months, with many more enduring a relentless campaign of starvation. Ms. Rachel, who has been called this generation’s Mister Rogers, began speaking out in May 2024, when she participated in a Save the Children fundraiser for kids in conflict zones, including Gaza. The backlash from the pro-Israel camp was so pronounced that Ms. Rachel soon posted a teary video discussing the bullying she was facing. The Zionist backlash has continued, with the doxxing outfit Stop Antisemitism formally requesting in April that the Department of Justice investigate Ms. Rachel to determine if she was “being remunerated to disseminate Hamas-aligned propaganda to her millions of followers.” But Ms. Rachel has not stopped insisting that Palestinian children, like all children, deserve safety and care. In May, she invited a three-year-old double amputee from Gaza named Rahaf onto her show. Beinart spoke to Ms. Rachel about her advocacy for Palestinian children and the pro-Israel backlash, the role faith and prayer have played in her decision to speak out, and why more celebrities haven’t followed suit.

    This conversation first appeared on The Beinart Notebook on Substack.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Media Mentioned and Further Reading

    Pro-Israel group asks DoJ to investigate Ms. Rachel over posts on Gaza children,” Joseph Gedeon, The Guardian

    “Ms. Rachel’s emotional plea for the lives of Palestinian children,” Christiane Amanpour, CNN

    Ms. Rachel’s fundraising page at the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund

    “A year of tears: 12 months of war on children,” UNICEF Report

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    30 min
  • Sephardi/Mizrahi Therapy
    Aug 7 2025

    In 2020, Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel and University of Washington professor of Sephardic studies Devin Naar, both descendants of Ladino speakers from Salonica (Thessaloniki) in Greece, had a conversation about what meaningful Sephardic representation might look like in the wake of near-total erasure. In this week’s episode, Angel and Naar join community leader and singer of Arab Jewish music Laura Elkeslassy and professor of Hebrew literature and Mizrahi studies Oren Yirmiya to deepen the discussion about Sephardi and Mizrahi reclamation work. What are the practical entry points to this identity today? What is the use of catchall caucuses that bring together Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews from many different countries and linguistic lineages, and does this identity have to homogenize in order to survive? What does it mean to do this work amid the genocide in Gaza? And how do we make sure reclamation work is not only backward-looking, but responsive to the present?

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Media Mentioned and Further Reading

    “Are We Post-Sepharadim?,” Arielle Angel in conversation with Devin Naar, Jewish Currents

    Ya Ghorbati: Divas in Exile by Laura Elkeslassy, live in concert and the artist’s reflections in Ayin on the songs she performs

    Shirei Yedidut, book of Moroccan piyyutim and bakashot

    Translations of the writings of Hayyim Ben-Kiki by Moshe Behar and Zvi Ben-Dor Benite in Modern Middle Eastern Jewish Thought: Writings on Identity, Politics, and Culture 1893–1958

    “Before the Law,” Franz Kafka

    “Going Out on a Limb: Joha,” Jane Mushabac

    The story about Djohá and the land can be found in Bewitched by Soli­ka and Oth­er Judeo-Span­ish Tales by François Azar.

    Devin Naar discusses Djohá in his introduction to the Moabet column in Ayin.

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    56 min
  • Making “Safety Through Solidarity” More Than a Slogan
    Jul 17 2025

    In May, a project called the Community Safety Campaign released a 134-page guide for Jewish organizers seeking to push their synagogues and communities towards an abolitionist approach to safety. The guide outlined a critique of the dominant “safety through surveillance” paradigm, in which Jewish communities rely on collaboration with police, the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, and private security forces to prevent violence and other threats. This approach is often tied in with these organizations’ embrace of the criminalization and repression of Palestine solidarity. As an alternative, the Community Safety Campaign guide offers a blueprint for Jewish organizations based on the Jewish left rallying cry of “safety through solidarity,” focused on creating trained community teams that provide safety at events and work closely with other religious and ethnic groups to share resources. Two Community Safety Campaign organizers, Nadav David and Erica Riddick, join associate editor Mari Cohen to discuss the political context that drove them to create the guide, the big players of the “safety through surveillance” paradigm, and existing successes in piloting community safety efforts across multiple synagogues in Boston. They also talk through approaching cases in which law enforcement has successfully combatted white supremacist violence and synagogue attacks, and consider how to draw the line between community safety and vigilante violence.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Texts Mentioned and Further Reading

    Community Safety Campaign Guide

    “The Dismal Failure of Jewish Groups to Confront Trump,” Stephen Lurie, The New Republic

    Understanding Antisemitism, JFREJ

    “Skin in the Game,” Erik Ward, Political Research Associates

    Safety Through Solidarity by Ben Lorber and Shane Burley

    In Letter To President-Elect Trump, SCN Calls For Action Against Non-Citizens,” Secure Communities Network

    “Fears of Government Surveillance Complicate Muslim Groups’ Access to Federal Security Funding,” Mari Cohen, Jewish Currents

    “Reject Increases to the Nonprofit Security Grant Program,” Community Safety Campaign and JFREJ

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    48 min
  • Brad Lander’s Campaign of Solidarity
    Jul 10 2025

    New York City Comptroller Brad Lander—a longtime fixture of the city’s progressive Jewish life—got 11% of the vote in the Democratic mayoral primary, but his cross-endorsement of Zohran Mamdani helped propel the latter to victory. This partnership inspired many: In a race marred by Islamophobia and false accusations of antisemitism (even against Lander himself), the cooperation between a Muslim and Jewish candidate, focused squarely on beating disgraced former governor Andrew Cuomo and making the city more affordable, was a breath of fresh air.

    On this episode of On the Nose, editor-at-large Peter Beinart talks to Lander about encountering Mamdani and Cuomo on the campaign trail, his cross-endorsement of Mamdani despite their differences on Israel, and what he’d like to see from New York Democrats who have been slow to support Mamdani. This conversation first appeared in the Beinart Notebook on Substack.

    Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”

    Related Videos and Articles

    Lander curses Cuomo in Yiddish

    Lander and Mamdani’s cross-endorsement video

    Lander and Mamdani on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

    “Brad Lander Is Having a Great Day,” Emily Leibert, The Cut

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    38 min