My Jewish Learning
My Jewish Learning is the leading independent website and digital community for all things Jewish, from Jewish history to text to ritual to prayer to food and much more. We offer a robust website with thousands of articles answering nearly every possible question about Judaism and Jewish life, a daily newsletter guiding subscribers through interesting facts and must-read news about Jewish life and practice, a daily Talmud essay called "A Daily Dose of Talmud," a weekly Shabbat newsletter, dozens of special emails featuring insights into major Jewish topics, and a robust online community through our social media channels. Articles written with the My Jewish Learning byline are authored and edited by our staff. My Jewish Learning's staff includes leading Jewish scholars and journalists. Rachel Scheinerman, who holds a doctorate in Ancient Judaism from Yale University, is My Jewish Learning's Editor, and Ben Harris, a longtime, award-winning journalist covering Jewish topics, is Managing Editor.
Articles by My Jewish Learning
Rosh Hashanah Theology and Themes
The Jewish New Year is simultaneously a time of great celebration and subtle trepidation.
The Jewish New Year at Home
The central home ritual of Rosh Hashanah consists of a special festive meal.
Kashrut: History and Development
Rabbinic Judaism elaborated a series of practices for putting the biblical restrictions into practice.
Kosher Animals
Most of the rules about meat, including the ban on pork, are stipulated in the Torah.
Kosher Food: What Makes Food Kosher or Not
The word "kosher" literally means "fit" or "appropriate."
Kashrut & Reform Judaism
A look at what, if any, aspects of this practice are relevant for modern Reform Jews.
Keeping Kosher: Contemporary Views
Recent writers reflect on what observing kashrut has meant in their own lives.
Kashrut Themes and Theology
Jewish dietary laws, the origins of which are in biblical law, have a variety of explanations within the Bible itself, and those explanations have themselves been the subject of multiple interpretations.
Kashrut 101
Jewish dietary laws are observed in varying degrees among Jewish families and individuals.
Jewish History, 1914 to 1948
The Jewish experience between 1914 and 1948 begins and ends with war. In 1914, WWI began, a watershed in both European and Jewish history, as it marked the end of four great empires: the Tsarist, Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, and German Reich.